Impact of a History of COVID-19 Infection on Postoperative Complications in Spinal Surgery: A Nationwide Cohort Study
Namhoo Kim, Joonoh Seo, Minae Park, Yoonjong Bae, Min Ho Lee, Byung Ho Lee, Si-Young Park, Kyung-Soo Suk, Seong-Hwan Moon, Hak-Sun Kim, Ji-Won Kwon

TL;DR
This study found that spinal surgery performed shortly after a history of COVID-19 increases the risk of certain postoperative complications like pneumonia and infections.
Contribution
The study is the first to show how the timing of spinal surgery after a prior COVID-19 infection affects specific postoperative complication risks.
Findings
Surgery within one month of a prior COVID-19 diagnosis increases the risk of postoperative pneumonia.
Surgery 1–3 months after infection raises the risk of spinal and implant-related infections.
The risk of infections remains elevated even when surgery occurs 3–6 months after a prior infection.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: The postoperative implications of a history of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in patients undergoing spinal surgery remain inadequately defined. This study investigated whether a history of COVID-19 is associated with increased postoperative complication risk and assessed how surgical timing after infection influences outcomes. Methods: Patients who underwent spinal surgery in 2020 were identified. Individuals with a confirmed history of COVID-19 were matched 1:3 by age and sex to uninfected controls. Patients were categorized by the interval between COVID-19 diagnosis and the index surgical date (≤1 month, >1–≤3 months, or >3–≤6 months). Postoperative pulmonary, cardiovascular, thromboembolic, infectious, and mortality outcomes were evaluated. Cumulative risks were estimated using Kaplan–Meier analysis, and adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) were determined using…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 and healthcare impacts · Surgical site infection prevention · Management of metastatic bone disease
