The utilization of a novel Outpatient Appropriateness Fragility Score to predict inpatient stay following biportal lumbar endoscopic decompression
Thomas E. Olson, Carlos Maturana, Christopher D. Hamad, Alex M. Upfill-Brown, William L. Sheppard, Don Young Park

TL;DR
A new fragility score helps predict which patients will need to stay in the hospital after a specific type of spine surgery.
Contribution
A novel Outpatient Appropriateness Fragility Score is developed to predict inpatient admission after biportal lumbar endoscopic decompression.
Findings
Patients with a fragility score ≥11 had a higher likelihood of inpatient admission.
Age, comorbidities, and surgical extent were stronger predictors of inpatient stay than BMI or sarcopenia.
The fragility score outperformed the Modified 5-Item Frailty Index in predicting admission.
Abstract
Biportal endoscopic spine surgery offers advantages such as reduced postoperative pain and faster recovery, often enabling same-day discharge. However, the patient-specific factors influencing the need for inpatient admission remain unclear. This study evaluates variables contributing to overnight stays following biportal lumbar endoscopic decompression and proposes a predictive fragility score. A retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data was conducted on 84 consecutive patients undergoing one- or two-level lumbar endoscopic decompression at a single U.S. academic center. Patients with trauma, tumor, infection, or revision procedures were excluded. Cohorts were divided by discharge status: same-day discharge (outpatient) versus one or more night hospital stay (inpatient). A novel fragility score (4–21 points) incorporating age, body mass index (BMI), comorbidities, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpine and Intervertebral Disc Pathology · Spinal Fractures and Fixation Techniques · Scoliosis diagnosis and treatment
