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More Than a Flesh Wound: Trisomy 21 Patients Undergoing Posterior Spinal Fusion for Scoliosis Have High Odds of Wound Complications.

STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study.

OBJECTIVES: Patients with trisomy 21 (T21) often have soft tissue differences that lead to greater risk of postoperative wound complications. Our aim was to use a matched cohort of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) patients with >2 year outcomes to determine odds of specific wound complications when comparing T21 and AIS patients.

METHODS: 14 T21 and 544 AIS patients were available for matching. Propensity score matching was conducted using logistic regression models and yielded a 1:5 match of 14 T21 patients and 70 AIS patients. Bivariate analyses were conducted across both patient groups. The proportion of wound complications was estimated along with a 95% confidence interval. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was utilized to determine if there was a significant association between T21 patients and wound outcomes.

RESULTS: 64% of T21 patients experienced a wound complication (9/14; 95% CI = 35.63-86.02) while only 3% of the AIS patients experienced a wound complication (2/70; 95% CI = .50-10.86). Patients with T21 had 56.6 times the odds of having a wound complication compared to matched AIS patients (OR = 56.57; 95% CI = 8.12-394.35; P < .001), controlling for age at surgery, BMI percentile, and propensity score. T21 patients had 10.4 times the odds of reoperation compared to AIS patients (OR = 10.36; 95% CI = 1.62-66.02; P = .01).

CONCLUSION: T21 patients have 10.4× the odds of reoperation and 56.6× the odds of overall wound complication when compared to AIS patients in a 1:5 matched cohort with appropriate controls. This is important for surgical planning, surgeon awareness, and communication with families preoperatively.

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