- lumbar or lumbosacral degenerative spinal stenosis - operative therapy: decompression at least - posterior approach - at least one existing follow-up (FU) - no additional spinal pathology such as deformity, fracture, trauma, spondylolisthesis, inflammation, infection, tumor, or failed surgery This produced 1,493 patients, who were subdivided into three age groups:
<
65 yrs (n=609, 41%), 65–74 yrs (n=487, 33%), and ≥75 yrs (n=397, 26%).
The surgical complication rate in the complete sample was 5.7%. Multivariate logistic regression showed surgery time (p<
0.001), fusion/rigid stabilization (p=0.025) and age group (p=0.043) as a significant co-variates for surgical complications. Group 3 had a 2.1-times higher likelihood for a surgical complication as in group 1. The general complication rate of the complete sample was 2.9%. We found ASA (p=0.002), fusion / rigid stabilization (p=0.022) and age group (p=0.008) as significant influencing factors for general complications. The follow-up complication rate was 10.2% and did not vary significantly between age groups, but multivariate logistic regression showed fusion/rigid stabilization (p<
0.001) and previous surgery (p=0.005) to be significant co-variates for FU complications. Clearly age-related was the duration of hospital admission and level of ASA (both p<
0.001).
Our study and literature leaves no doubt about that aged and very aged patients benefit from surgical treatment. Therefore, although we should be aware of the increased risk for surgical and general complications in this population, high age (>
75 yrs) should not be a main influencing factor in the choice of operative indication and strategy when treating LSS.