Study design:
Retrospective database study.
Objective:
To compare outcomes between 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4- level anterior cervical discectomy and fusions (ACDF) and posterior cervical fusions (PCF) procedures using a national database.
Summary of background data:
Surgical outcomes involving 3- or 4-level ACDF and PCF cases are not well-described. As there are situations where both ACDF and PCF can be employed, it is important to compare the risks and benefits of both procedures.
Materials and methods:
Patients who underwent ACDF or PCF between 2010 and 2020 were identified in PearlDiver using current procedural terminology codes. Surgeries done for infectious, traumatic, or neoplastic etiologies were excluded. 2-year reoperations and 90-day readmissions were queried. Surgical complications and transfusions were compiled using ICD-9/10 billing codes. ACDF and PCF procedures were then matched by age, sex, Charlson Comorbidity Index, and a number of levels fused, and the above outcomes were compared.
Results:
In all, 31,301 PCFs and 110,526 ACDFs were identified. After matching for age, sex, and Charlson Comorbidity Index, a total of 30,353 ACDF and PCF procedures were compared. Three-level and 4-level PCFs had higher rates of 90-day postoperative surgical complications compared with ACDF (OR=2.4 and 2.87, respectively; P<0.001). In addition, higher rates of 90-day readmissions were noted in 3-level PCF compared with 3-level ACDF (OR=1.24, P<0.001). Ninety-day postoperative transfusions were higher in both 3- and 4-level PCFs (OR=2.44 and 18.27, respectively; P<0.001). Two-year reoperations rates were higher for 3-level PCF procedures than 3-level ACDF (OR=1.22; P=0.01).
Conclusions:
Patients who underwent 3-4-level ACDF had lower rates of readmission, blood transfusions, and postoperative complications compared with 3-4-level PCF. This data suggests that in cases of 3-4-level pathology with clinical equipoise regarding approach, ACDF may be associated with less short-term morbidity, however, data on fusion rates and adjacent level disease are needed.