# Time cost of the intraoperative CT in dorsal spinal fusion surgery in degenerative spinal disorders - a retrospective analysis of 518 degenerative cases

**Authors:** Amir Zolal, Jan Mateo, Jörg Silbermann, Milos Paulik, Peggy Gierschner, Matthias Kirsch

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.bas.2026.105993 · Brain & Spine · 2026-02-27

## TL;DR

This study found that using intraoperative CT in spinal surgery adds about 38 minutes to the procedure time but does not affect hospital stay or short-term recovery.

## Contribution

The study quantifies the time impact of intraoperative CT in spinal fusion surgery and shows it does not affect postoperative recovery.

## Key findings

- Intraoperative CT increased skin-to-skin time by 38.1 minutes.
- High-volume surgeons reduced operative time by approximately 35 minutes.
- Intraoperative CT had no significant effect on postoperative length of stay.

## Abstract

To evaluate the impact of intraoperative CT (ioCT)-based navigation on surgery duration, non-surgical anesthesia time, and postoperative length of stay in posterior spinal fusion procedures for degenerative spinal disorders, while accounting for surgeon performance and other procedural factors.

Does the intraoperative CT use prolong the surgery, and does it affect short term recovery.

This retrospective, single-center study analyzed 518 cases of dorsal spinal fusion performed with or without ioCT between 2013 and 2018 for degenerative spinal disorders. Demographic and clinical variables such as the number of screws implanted, use of cages, revision status and the surgical volume of the performing surgeon. Surgery duration and postoperative length of stay were assessed using generalized linear models (GLMs).

The mean age of the cohort was 65.67 years (52.5 % female). ioCT-based navigation was employed in 209 of 518 cases (40.3 %). After multivariable adjustment, ioCT increased skin-to-skin time by 38.1 min in the full cohort. The effect persisted in both prespecified subgroups, adding 39.2 min in complex procedures (≥6 screws, ≥4 cages, or iliac screws; n = 233) and 40.2 min in non-complex procedures (n = 285). High-volume surgeons (>50 cases) shortened operative time by ≈ 35 min ioCT showed no significant influence on postoperative length of stay.

Intraoperative CT-based navigation modestly increases surgical and procedural time. IoCT use did not affect postoperative hospital stay in our analysis, neither improving the short term outcome through better accuracy nor worsening the outcomes through the effects of prolonged surgery time.

•Intraoperative CT (ioCT) increased skin-to-skin time by 38.1 min.•ioCT also increased non-surgical anesthesia time by 9.36 min.•High-volume surgeons shortened operative time by approximately 35 min.•ioCT showed no significant influence on postoperative length of stay (LOS).•Short-term recovery influenced by complications, not precision of screw placement.

Intraoperative CT (ioCT) increased skin-to-skin time by 38.1 min.

ioCT also increased non-surgical anesthesia time by 9.36 min.

High-volume surgeons shortened operative time by approximately 35 min.

ioCT showed no significant influence on postoperative length of stay (LOS).

Short-term recovery influenced by complications, not precision of screw placement.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** tumor (MESH:D009369), trauma (MESH:D014947), degenerative (MESH:D019636), fractures (MESH:D050723), infections (MESH:D007239), dural tear (MESH:D020785), infectious disease (MESH:D003141)
- **Chemicals:** IoCT (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

19 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12966759/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12966759