PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Waleed Ahmad AU - Joshua Bell AU - Oscar Krol AU - Lara Passfall AU - Pramod Kamalapathy AU - Bailey Imbo AU - Peter Tretiakov AU - Tyler Williamson AU - Rachel Joujon-Roche AU - Kevin Moattari AU - Nicholas Kummer AU - Shaleen Vira AU - Virginie Lafage AU - Carl Paulino AU - Andrew J. Schoenfeld AU - Bassel Diebo AU - Hamid Hassanzadeh AU - Peter Passias TI - Failure to Normalize Risk Profile of Spine Fusion Patients With Coronary Artery Disease Previously Treated With Percutaneous Stent Revascularization AID - 10.14444/8392 DP - 2023 Feb 01 TA - International Journal of Spine Surgery PG - 139--145 VI - 17 IP - 1 4099 - http://ijssurgery.com//content/17/1/139.short 4100 - http://ijssurgery.com//content/17/1/139.full SO - Int J Spine Surg2023 Feb 01; 17 AB - Background The impact of an initially less invasive cardiac intervention on outcomes of future surgical spine procedures has been understudied; therefore, we sought to investigate the effect of coronary stents on postoperative outcomes in an elective spine fusion cohort.Methods Elective spine fusion patients were isolated with International Classification of Diseases-Ninth Edition and current procedural terminology procedure codes in the PearlDiver database. Patients were stratified by number of coronary stents: (1) 1 to 2 stents (ST12); (2) 3 to 4 stents (ST34); (3) no stents. Mean comparison tests compared differences in demographics, diagnoses, comorbidities, and 30-day and 90-day complication outcomes. Logistic regression assessed the odds of complications associated with coronary stents, controlling for levels fused, age, sex, and comorbidities (odds ratio [95% confidence interval]). Statistical significance was P < 0.05.Results A total of 726,061 elective spine fusion patients were isolated. Of those patients, 707,396 patients had no stent, 17,087 ST12, and 1578 ST34. At baseline (BL), ST12 patients had higher rates of morbid obesity, chronic kidney disease, congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and diabetes mellitus compared with no stent and ST34 patients (all P < 0.001). Relative to no stent patients, ST12 patients had a longer length of stay and, at 30 days, significantly higher complication rates, including pneumonia, myocardial infarction (MI), sepsis, acute kidney injury, urinary tract infection (UTI), wound complications, transfusions, and 30-day readmissions (P < 0.05). Controlling for age, sex, comorbidities, and levels fused, ST12 was a significant predictor of MI within 30 days (OR 2.15 [95% CI 1.7–2.7], P < 0.001) and 90 days postoperatively (OR 1.87 [95% CI 1.6–2.2], P < 0.001). ST34 patients compared with no stent patients at 30 days presented with increased rates of complication, including pneumonia, MI, sepsis, UTI, wound complications, and 30-day readmissions. Regression analysis showed no significant differences in complications between ST12 vs ST34 at 30 days, but at 90 days, ST34 was associated with significantly increased rate and odds of death (1.1% vs 0.3%, P = 0.021; OR 1.94 [95% CI 1.13–3.13], P = 0.01).Conclusion Cardiac stents failed to normalize risk profile of patients with coronary artery disease. Postoperatively at 90 days, elective spine fusion patients with 3 or more stents were significantly at risk of mortality compared with patients with fewer or no stents.Level of Evidence 3.