Major Complications and 30-Day Morbidity for Single Jaw Versus Bimaxillary Orthognathic Surgery as Reported by NSQIP

Objective: Acute complications in orthognathic surgery are reported in single-institution studies with small sample sizes. We aimed to analyze risk factors for acute complications using a national data set to better inform surgical decision-making. Methods: 2005-2015 National Surgical Quality Improv...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Cleft palate-craniofacial journal 2019-07, Vol.56 (6), p.705-710
Hauptverfasser: Bacos, Jonathan, Turin, Sergey Y., Vaca, Elbert E., Gosain, Arun K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: Acute complications in orthognathic surgery are reported in single-institution studies with small sample sizes. We aimed to analyze risk factors for acute complications using a national data set to better inform surgical decision-making. Methods: 2005-2015 National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) data sets were analyzed for patients undergoing Le Fort 1 and/or bilateral sagittal split osteotomies (BSSO) for nontraumatic indications. Demographics, comorbidities, medical, and surgical 30-day complications were tabulated. A logistic regression model was used to determine predictors of complications. Results: Five hundred eight patients met the inclusion criteria: 228 underwent Le Fort I osteotomies, 152 BSSO, and 128 patients underwent both during a single surgical encounter. Overall complication rate was 4.5% (23/508). Superficial infection was the most common complication (11 in BSSO and 2 in Le Fort I cohorts). Increasing age and undergoing BSSO alone were associated with higher overall complication rates (P < .05) and surgical complications specifically (P < .05). Patients undergoing the combined procedure had shorter operative time (208 minutes) than the times for Le Fort I osteotomies alone (177 minutes) and BSSO alone (155 minutes) added together and did not have a longer hospital stay (P = .608) or increased need for transfusion (P = 1.0) compared to the surgeries being done separately. Conclusion: This is the first complication risk factor analysis for Le Fort I osteotomy and BSSO using the multi-institutional NSQIP data set. Combining BSSO and Le Fort I osteotomy leads to a shorter overall operative time and does not increase hospital stay duration or 30-day complication rate when compared to the 2 procedures being done separately.
ISSN:1055-6656
1545-1569
DOI:10.1177/1055665618814402