Elixhauser Comorbidity Index to Predict Perioperative Bleeding and Adverse Spine Surgery Outcomes
Mitchell K. Ng, Michael A. Mont, Mosadoluwa Afolabi, Prathiksha N. V, Amitha Kumar, Stephen S. Johnston

TL;DR
This study shows that patients with more health issues face higher risks of severe bleeding during spine surgery, leading to worse outcomes like longer hospital stays and higher costs.
Contribution
The study introduces the Elixhauser Comorbidity Index as a predictor of perioperative bleeding and adverse outcomes in spine surgery.
Findings
15.3% of spine surgery patients experienced disruptive bleeding, with higher rates in women and those with Medicare.
Higher ECI scores correlated with increased odds of disruptive bleeding and worse outcomes like mortality and hospital costs.
Disruptive bleeding led to longer hospital stays, higher readmission rates, and greater ventilator use.
Abstract
Introduction: As spine surgery volume continues to grow, ensuring patient safety and minimizing complications are increasingly critical. Disruptive bleeding—defined as hemorrhagic events requiring clinical intervention—is a significant perioperative challenge. This study aimed to: (1) quantify disruptive bleeding incidence; (2) evaluate associations between patient demographics, Elixhauser Comorbidity Index (ECI), and bleeding risk; and (3) assess the impact of disruptive bleeding on mortality, ventilator use, length of inpatient stay, 90-day readmissions, and inpatient costs. Methods: A nationwide healthcare database was used to identify patients who underwent spine surgery in 2019. Patients were subdivided by the Elixhauser Comorbidity Index (ECI) from 0 to ≥6, and multivariate logistic regression was employed to analyze for potential association with disruptive bleeding. Odds ratios…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTrauma, Hemostasis, Coagulopathy, Resuscitation · Blood transfusion and management · Nosocomial Infections in ICU
