General versus spinal anesthesia in joint arthroplasties
Editorial

General versus spinal anesthesia in joint arthroplasties

Crispiana Cozowicz1,2, Stavros G. Memtsoudis1,2

1Department of Anesthesiology, Hospital for Special Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College, NY 10021, USA; 2Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative Medicine and Intensive Care Medicine, Paracelsus Medical University, Muellner Hauptstrasse 48, Salzburg 5020, Austria

Correspondence to: Stavros G. Memtsoudis, MD, PhD, FCCP. Department of Anesthesiology, Hospital for Special Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College, 535 East 70th Street, NY 10021, USA. Email: memtsoudiss@hss.edu.

Submitted Jun 04, 2015. Accepted for publication Jun 05, 2015.

doi: 10.3978/j.issn.2305-5839.2015.06.11


Over the last decades demographic changes and high success rates have continued to increase the utilization of total joint replacements with estimates of continued dramatic growth (1,2). It has become obvious that given this often elderly and comorbidity ridden patient population joint arthroplasties have exerted significant medical and economic stresses on the health care system. In this context, the identification of intervention with the goal to improving perioperative outcomes has become more important than ever.

In a recent population based study, Basques et al. conducted an analysis including nearly 21,000 total hip arthroplasty recipients who either had neuraxial or general anesthesia (3). The main goal of this investigation was to compare postoperative adverse events and utilization of hospital resources among the two anesthesia techniques. General anesthesia was utilized in about 61% of the cases. These patients, were younger, had less comorbidities but an increased BMI compared to the neuraxial cohort. The authors found that higher odds for complications were associated with the use of general anesthesia. Compared to neuraxial, general anesthesia was associated with higher odds for any adverse event in general [odds ratio, 1.31 (95% CI, 1.23-1.41); P<0.001] as well as specific adversities such as prolonged postoperative ventilator use [odds ratio, 5.81 (95% CI, 1.35-25.06); P=0.018] and unplanned intubation [odds ratio, 2.17 (95% CI, 1.11-4.29); P=0.024], cardiac arrest [odds ratio, 5.04 (95% CI, 1.15-22.07); P=0.032] and the need for blood transfusions [odds ratio, 1.34 (95% CI, 1.25-1.45); P<0.001]. Further, the utilization of general compared to neuraxial anesthesia was associated with increased operative and postoperative room time, although no differences were found for length of hospital stay and odds for readmission.

These results are in concordance with a significant number of recent population based studies which have shown that the choice of anesthesia technique might significantly contribute to the improvement of perioperative outcomes. Numerous studies strongly support the notion that choosing regional instead of general anesthesia may improve not only medical perioperative outcomes but positively affect resource utilization (4-7). Resulting benefits range from decrease of blood transfusion use and mechanical ventilation need to reduced mortality risk.

Given these findings, however, it is intriguing that among various data sets the utilization of neuraxial anesthesia has been found to be fairly low compared to the general anesthesia approach. In the study by Basques et al., as in other publications on the topic, about 40% of the patients or less received neuraxial anesthesia (3,7). While the reasons for this underutilization remain largely unknown (8) an additional point for concern in light of the consistently better outcomes reported with neuraxial anesthesia are variations in care and disparities in anesthesia practice showing differences in its application among patient subgroups and hospitals (9-11).

The study by Basques et al. further deserves to be put in the context of the recent emergence of large database anesthesia related outcomes research (3). Although the subject of differential outcomes among anesthesia types has been the subject of numerous clinical studies, these have rarely reached sufficient power to allow for the reaching of meaningful conclusions and lacked external validity. Meta-analytical approaches allowed for pooling of data thus allowing for the examination of larger cohorts, but at the expense of including studies spanning over multiple decades questioning relevance in today’s practice. Further, these analyses only allowed for the study of limited outcomes as available in the individual investigations. Irrespectively, these publications also suggested improved outcomes with regional versus general anesthesia (7,12).

With the advent of large database research, many previous limitations regarding sample size and external validity could be overcome and data from real-world practice could be examined without the constraints of often unrealistic inclusion and exclusion criteria of randomized controlled trials. These advantages however come at the expense of the inability to determine causality. Thus, despite of the overwhelming number of studies supporting the use of neuraxial anesthesia, the lack of answers regarding causal relationships has been the reason why controversy still persists in this matter (13-15). In addition, comorbidities, surgical pathologies and complications are based on ICD-9 coding which can be burdened by coding bias despite all quality checks. Further, anesthesia technique represents only one of many perioperative interventions influencing overall outcomes and residual confounding certainly exists.

Therefore, the interpretation of results from database research and other studies favoring neuraxial anesthesia has to be made carefully. Taking prevalent disparities into account and differences in clinical practice of regional anesthesia, superiority of regional anesthesia could be subject to confounding. The question whether regional anesthesia might represent a surrogate marker for a “specific type of perioperative” clinical practice remains unknown. Furthermore, the issue whether the avoidance of general anesthesia or the implementation of neuraxial anesthesia itself confers a positive effect, remains debatable (12), although studies including cohorts that received a combination of both approaches have been suggested to fair better than general only patients.

In the face of these limitations only a large multicenter prospective pragmatic trial may offer the definitive answer to the remaining questions regarding causality and mechanisms. Until such studies are performed—which may be never given the enormous scope and cost—clinicians should take comfort in the fact that virtually no studies have found inferior outcomes associated with neuraxial when compared to general anesthesia.

In conclusion, assuming that the positive outcomes related to neuraxial anesthesia are causally related a wider utilization among the over 1 million patients undergoing joint arthroplasty annually in the United States alone might produce a significant impact on the health care system as a whole (1).


Acknowledgements

None.


Footnote

Conflicts of Interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.


References

  1. Kurtz S, Ong K, Lau E, et al. Projections of primary and revision hip and knee arthroplasty in the United States from 2005 to 2030. J Bone Joint Surg Am 2007;89:780-5. [PubMed]
  2. Neuman MD, Silber JH, Elkassabany NM, et al. Comparative effectiveness of regional versus general anesthesia for hip fracture surgery in adults. Anesthesiology 2012;117:72-92. [PubMed]
  3. Basques BA, Toy JO, Bohl DD, et al. General compared with spinal anesthesia for total hip arthroplasty. J Bone Joint Surg Am 2015;97:455-61. [PubMed]
  4. Liu J, Ma C, Elkassabany N, et al. Neuraxial anesthesia decreases postoperative systemic infection risk compared with general anesthesia in knee arthroplasty. Anesth Analg 2013;117:1010-6. [PubMed]
  5. Chang CC, Lin HC, Lin HW, et al. Anesthetic management and surgical site infections in total hip or knee replacement: a population-based study. Anesthesiology 2010;113:279-84. [PubMed]
  6. Pugely AJ, Martin CT, Gao Y, et al. Differences in short-term complications between spinal and general anesthesia for primary total knee arthroplasty. J Bone Joint Surg Am 2013;95:193-9. [PubMed]
  7. Memtsoudis SG, Sun X, Chiu YL, et al. Perioperative comparative effectiveness of anesthetic technique in orthopedic patients. Anesthesiology 2013;118:1046-58. [PubMed]
  8. Memtsoudis SG, Stundner O, Rasul R, et al. Sleep apnea and total joint arthroplasty under various types of anesthesia: a population-based study of perioperative outcomes. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2013;38:274-81. [PubMed]
  9. Richardson LD, Norris M. Access to health and health care: how race and ethnicity matter. Mt Sinai J Med 2010;77:166-77. [PubMed]
  10. Bang H, Chiu YL, Memtsoudis SG, et al. Total hip and total knee arthroplasties: trends and disparities revisited. Am J Orthop (Belle Mead NJ) 2010;39:E95-102. [PubMed]
  11. Fleischut PM, Eskreis-Winkler JM, Gaber-Baylis LK, et al. Variability in anesthetic care for total knee arthroplasty: an analysis from the anesthesia quality institute. Am J Med Qual 2015;30:172-9. [PubMed]
  12. Rodgers A, Walker N, Schug S, et al. Reduction of postoperative mortality and morbidity with epidural or spinal anaesthesia: results from overview of randomised trials. BMJ 2000;321:1493. [PubMed]
  13. Mitchell D, Friedman RJ, Baker JD 3rd, et al. Prevention of thromboembolic disease following total knee arthroplasty. Epidural versus general anesthesia. Clin Orthop Relat Res 1991;109-12. [PubMed]
  14. Planès A, Vochelle N, Fagola M, et al. Prevention of deep vein thrombosis after total hip replacement. The effect of low-molecular-weight heparin with spinal and general anaesthesia. J Bone Joint Surg Br 1991;73:418-22. [PubMed]
  15. Brueckner S, Reinke U, Roth-Isigkeit A, et al. Comparison of general and spinal anesthesia and their influence on hemostatic markers in patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty. J Clin Anesth 2003;15:433-40. [PubMed]
Cite this article as: Cozowicz C, Memtsoudis SG. General versus spinal anesthesia in joint arthroplasties. Ann Transl Med 2015;3(12):161. doi: 10.3978/j.issn.2305-5839.2015.06.11

Download Citation