Indication for spinal surgery: associated factors and regional differences in Germany

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Falko Tesch - , Center for Evidence-Based Healthcare (Author)
  • Toni Lange - , Center for Evidence-Based Healthcare (Author)
  • Jochen Schmitt - , Center for Evidence-Based Healthcare (Author)
  • Patrik Dröge - , Allgemeine Ortskrankenkasse (AOK), Research Institute Berlin (Author)
  • Christian Günster - , Allgemeine Ortskrankenkasse (AOK), Research Institute Berlin (Author)
  • Johannes Flechtenmacher - , German Professional Association for Orthopedics and Trauma (BVOU), Berlin, Germany (Author)
  • Burkhard Lembeck - , German Professional Association for Orthopedics and Trauma (BVOU), Berlin, Germany (Author)
  • Bernd Kladny - , German Professional Association for Orthopedics and Trauma (BVOU), Berlin, Germany, m&i Fachklinik Herzogenaurach (Author)
  • Dieter Christian Wirtz - , German Society for Orthopedics and Trauma (DGOU), Berlin, Germany, University of Bonn Medical Center (Author)
  • Fritz‑Uwe Niethard - , University of Bonn Medical Center (Author)

Abstract

Background
Rising surgery rates have raised questions about the indications for spinal surgery. The study investigated patient-level and regional factors associated with spinal surgery for patients with spinal diseases.
Methods
We undertook a cohort study based on routine healthcare data from Germany of 18.4 million patients within 60.9 million episodes of two patient-years before a possible spinal surgery in the time period 2008 to 2016. Using a Poisson model, the effects of a broad range of patient-related (sociodemographic, morbidity, social status), disease- and healthcare-related (physicians’ specialty, conservative treatments) and regional variables were analyzed.
Results
There was substantial regional heterogeneity in the occurrence of spinal surgery which decreased by only one quarter when controlling for the various determinants assessed. Previous musculoskeletal and mental health disorders as well as physical therapy were associated with a lower probability of surgery in the fully-adjusted model. Prescriptions for pain medication and consultations of specialists were associated with a higher probability of surgery. However, the specific severity of the vertebral diseases could not be taken into account in the analysis. Furthermore, a substantial proportion of patients with surgery did not receive a consultation with an outpatient specialist (29.5%), preoperative diagnostics (37.0%) or physical therapy (48.3%) before hospital admission.
Conclusion
This large study on spinal diseases in Germany highlights important patterns in medical care of spinal diseases and their association with the probability of spinal surgery. However, only a relatively small proportion of the regional heterogeneity in spinal surgery could be explained by the extensive consideration of confounders, which suggests the relevance of other unmeasured factors like physicians’ preferences.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number1109
Number of pages8
JournalBMC Health Services Research
Volume22
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 2 Sept 2022
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 85137100996
PubMed 36050682
WOS 000848877700005
Mendeley 2e9cc6e1-f486-308f-829d-8666bce5dbce
ORCID /0000-0002-8671-7496/work/142249562

Keywords

Subject groups, research areas, subject areas according to Destatis

Sustainable Development Goals

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Keywords

  • Cohort Studies, Germany/epidemiology, Humans, Medicine, Referral and Consultation, Spinal Diseases/surgery, Back pain, Secondary data analysis, Health service research, Spinal surgery

Library keywords