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Does Early Surgical Fixation of Proximal Femoral Fractures in Elderly Patients Affect Mortality Rates?* * Study performed at the Orthopedics and Traumatology Department, Escola Paulista de Medicina, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil. Originally Published by Elsevier Editora Ltda.

Abstract

Objective

To analyze whether a reduction in the waiting time for orthopedic surgery in elderly patients with fracture of the proximal end of the femur leads to a reduction in in-hospital mortality, 6-month mortality, and duration of hospitalization.

Methods

This was a retrospective cohort study including 81 patients with intertrochanteric and subtrochanteric fractures who underwent surgical repair between 2015 and 2016 in a referral hospital, before and after a protocol for early surgical fixation (< 48 hours) was implemented.

Results

Themean length of hospital stay decreased from17 to 11 days. Regarding the in-hospital mortality rate, five patients died before, and another five died after the protocol was implemented. The 6-month postoperative mortality decreased from 26.7% to 19.4%. The results showed no statistical significance.

Conclusion

The present study demonstrated that there is a tendency to reduce the length of hospital stay and 6-month mortality when the surgery for the treatment of proximal femoral fractures in the elderly is performed within 48 hours of hospitalization.

Keywords:
hip fractures; mortality; elderly; orthopedics

Resumo

Objetivo

Analisar se a redução no tempo de espera para cirurgia ortopédica nos pacientes idosos com fratura da extremidade proximal do fêmur impacta na redução da mortalidade intra-hospitalar, da mortalidade em 6 meses de seguimento, e na redução do tempo de internação hospitalar.

Métodos

Trabalho de coorte retrospectiva fundamentado na análise de prontuários de 81 pacientes internados com diagnóstico de fratura transtrocanteriana ou subtrocanteriana do fêmur, e submetidos a tratamento cirúrgico em 2015 e 2016 em um hospital de referência no atendimento ao trauma, antes e após a implantação de protocolo para cirurgia em até 48 horas.

Resultados

Observou-se redução do tempo médio de internação de 17 para 11 dias após a implantação do protocolo. Com relação à mortalidade intra-hospitalar, cinco pacientes faleceram antes da implantação do protocolo, e cinco, após a implantação do protocolo. Referente à mortalidade extra-hospitalar, avaliada em 6 meses de pósoperatório, observou-se uma redução de 26,7% para 19,4%. Os resultados não apresentaram significância estatística.

Conclusão

Opresente estudodemonstrouque existe uma tendência à redução dotempo de internação hospitalar e damortalidadeem6meses quando a cirurgia para tratamento de fraturas do fêmur proximal no idoso é feita em até 48 horas de internação hospitalar.

Palavras-chave:
fraturas do quadril; mortalidade; idoso; ortopedia

Introduction

The progressive increase in life expectancy observed over the last decades resulted in a significant increase in the prevalence of trauma in elderly individuals. Proximal femur fractures are among the most common fractures in the elderly, and present high morbidity and mortality rates, constituting a public health issue. Epidemiological data indicate that the 1-year mortality of elderly patients with proximal femoral fractures ranges from 14 to 36%,11 Zuckerman JD. Hip fracture. N Engl J Med 1996;334(23): 1519-1525 22 Orosz GM, Magaziner J, Hannan EL, et al. Association of timing of surgery for hip fracture and patient outcomes. JAMA 2004;291 (14):1738-1743 33 Simunovic N, Devereaux PJ, Sprague S, et al. Effect of early surgery after hip fracture on mortality and complications: systematic review and meta-analysis. CMAJ 2010;182(15):1609-1616 44 Panula J, Pihlajamäki H, Mattila VM, et al. Mortality and cause of death in hip fracture patients aged 65 or older: a populationbased study. BMC Musculoskelet Disord 2011;12:105 55 Schnell S, Friedman SM, Mendelson DA, Bingham KW, Kates SL. The 1-yearmortality of patients treated in a hip fracture program for elders. Geriatr Orthop Surg Rehabil 2010;1(01):6-14 66 Parker M, Johansen A. Hip fracture. BMJ 2006;333(7557):27-30 and only 50 to 65% of these patients completely recover their previous functional activity.11 Zuckerman JD. Hip fracture. N Engl J Med 1996;334(23): 1519-1525 77 Koval KJ, Skovron ML, Aharonoff GB, Meadows SE, Zuckerman JD. Ambulatory ability after hip fracture. A prospective study in geriatric patients. Clin Orthop Relat Res 1995;(310):150-159 88 Koval KJ, Zuckerman JD. Functional recovery after fracture of the hip. J Bone Joint Surg Am 1994;76(05):751-758

More than 98% of the cases are surgically treated, and evidence indicates that surgery performed within 48 hours reduces the risk of complications secondary to femoral fractures in the elderly. On the other hand, surgeries performed after 48 hours or more increase the risk of mortality in 30 days and up to 1 year.99 Bottle A, Aylin P.Mortality associated with delay in operation after hip fracture: observational study. BMJ 2006;332(7547):947-951 1010 Gdalevich M, Cohen D, Yosef D, Tauber C.Morbidity andmortality after hip fracture: the impact of operative delay. Arch Orthop Trauma Surg 2004;124(05):334-340 1111 Perez JV,Warwick DJ, Case CP, Bannister GC. Death after proximal femoral fracture-an autopsy study. Injury 1995;26(04):237-240 1212 Novack V, Jotkowitz A, Etzion O, Porath A. Does delay in surgery after hip fracture lead to worse outcomes? A multicenter survey. Int J Qual Health Care 2007;19(03):170-176 1313 Rogers FB, Shackford SR, Keller MS. Early fixation reduces morbidity and mortality in elderly patients with hip fractures from low-impact falls. J Trauma 1995;39(02):261-265 Considering the importance of this issue, the present study was developed to analyze whether the reduction in the waiting time for orthopedic surgery in elderly patients with proximal femoral fractures has an impact on the reduction of in-hospital and 6-month mortalities, as well as on the length of hospital stay.

Material and Methods

This was a retrospective cohort study including male and female patients > 60 years old with closed isolated femoral transtrochanteric or subtrochanteric fractures. The anatomical classification of the fractures was made by an orthopedist with a specialist degree at the emergency room, and was confirmed by the orthopedic surgeon at the referral hospital.

The present study was submitted and approved by the Ethics in Research Committee of our institution under the number 1.890.165. Data regarding hospitalization (length of hospital stay, diagnosis, treatment and clinical outcome) were obtained through a review of electronic medical records. The verification of death and its date were obtained from the electronic medical records, by contact by telephone, or from the obituary.

A specific protocol was developed in 2016 for the care of elderly patients with proximal femoral fractures in the urgency and emergency network of our hospital to reduce the waiting time for orthopedic surgery in this type of fracture and, thus, to reduce mortality and length of hospital stay. The primary objective of this protocol is to operate elderly patients with transtrochanteric and/or subtrochanteric fractures within 48 hours of hospital admission.

Every patient in the study was admitted and underwent surgical treatment at a referral hospital in trauma care starting in 2015. The patients were divided into 2 groups: those who underwent surgery under the femoral fracture in the elderly protocol (after the first quarter of 2016) and those who underwent surgery outside the protocol (throughout 2015 and during the first quarter of 2016).

Patients with incomplete and/or insufficient data at the review of the medical records, patients who had undergone nonsurgical treatments, and those who could not be reached by telephone, deemed lost at follow-up, were excluded from the study.

The following variables were studied: length of hospital stay (before and after the implementation of the protocol), and general, in-hospital and 6-month mortalities. The data were analyzed through tables and parametrical analysis of variance (ANOVA) and equality of two proportions statistical tests using IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 20.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, US), Minitab 16 (Minitab, LLC., State College, PA, US), and Excel (Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, WA, US). A maximum significance level of 5% (p≤ 0.05) was defined.

Results

A total of 159 patients were selected in 2015 and 2016 under ICD10 S72. Of the total, 78 patients were excluded because they did not meet the study criteria, resulting in a final sample of 81 patients (Fig. 1). All of the patients had their electronic medical records reviewed and/or were contacted by telephone.

Fig. 1
Flow chart of patient inclusion.

The mean hospital stay was of ∼ 17 days for the group evaluated prior to the implementation of the protocol and of 11 days for patients hospitalized after the implementation of the protocol (Table 1). There was no statistically significant difference (p= 0.095).

Table 1
Comparison of in-hospital length of stay

Of the total sample, 19 patients died during the investigation period, corresponding to 26.7% of the preprotocol implementation group and 19.4% of the postprotocol implementation group, respectively (p= 0.446) (Table 2).

Table 2
General mortality in 6 months

During the hospital stay, 5 patients from the preprotocol implementation group and 5 from the postprotocol implementation group died, but there was no statistical difference in the mortality rate between the groups (p= 0.210) (Table 3).

Table 3
Analysis of deaths

Discussion

The present study evaluated the length of hospitalization and in-hospital and 6-month mortalities in elderly patients with proximal femoral fractures before and after the implementation of a protocol for early definitive surgical treatment (within 48 hours of admission). We observed a decrease in the length of hospitalization and in the mortality rate at 6 months postsurgery, but with no statistical significance.

Our results showed a reduction in general mortality in 6 months from 26.7% to 19.4% after the implementation of the protocol (a high value compared to other studies, which can be explained by the small number of patients analyzed).

Although it is recommended that the optimal time for surgical treatment of proximal femoral fractures is 24 to 48 hours after the occurrence, some studies have not demonstrated a reduction in mortality or an increase in functional recovery with early surgery.22 Orosz GM, Magaziner J, Hannan EL, et al. Association of timing of surgery for hip fracture and patient outcomes. JAMA 2004;291 (14):1738-1743 1414 Majumdar SR, Beaupre LA, Johnston DW, Dick DA, Cinats JG, Jiang HX. Lack of association between mortality and timing of surgical fixation in elderly patients with hip fracture: results of a retrospective population-based cohort study. Med Care 2006;44(06): 552-559 1515 Grimes JP, Gregory PM, Noveck H, ButlerMS, Carson JL. The effects of time-to-surgery on mortality and morbidity in patients following hip fracture. Am J Med 2002;112(09):702-709 1616 Siegmeth AW, Gurusamy K, Parker MJ. Delay to surgery prolongs hospital stay inpatients with fractures of the proximal femur. J Bone Joint Surg Br 2005;87(08):1123-1126 1717 Franzo A, Simon G, Francescutti C.Mortality associatedwith delay in operation after hip fracture: ... but Italian data seem to contradict study findings. BMJ 2006;332(7549):1093 1818 Khan SK, Kalra S, Khanna A, Thiruvengada MM, Parker MJ. Timing of surgery for hip fractures: a systematic review of 52 published studies involving 291,413 patients. Injury 2009;40(07):692-697

Orosz et al22 Orosz GM, Magaziner J, Hannan EL, et al. Association of timing of surgery for hip fracture and patient outcomes. JAMA 2004;291 (14):1738-1743 studied 1,206 patients aged > 50 years old and observed a general mortality rate in 2 months of 8.3%; their analysis showed that surgery within 24 hours does not reduce mortality in 2 and 6 months.

Siegmeth et al,1616 Siegmeth AW, Gurusamy K, Parker MJ. Delay to surgery prolongs hospital stay inpatients with fractures of the proximal femur. J Bone Joint Surg Br 2005;87(08):1123-1126 after analyzing 3,628 (clinically compensated) patients aged > 60 years old, concluded that the mortality of previously healthy patients increased when the surgical procedure was performed after 48 hours.

Regarding the length of hospital stay, we noticed a reduction from 17 to 11 days, which, although with no significant association, is consistent with literature findings. Lefaivre et al1919 Lefaivre KA, Macadam SA, Davidson DJ, Gandhi R, Chan H, Broekhuyse HM. Length of stay, mortality, morbidity and delay to surgery in hip fractures. J Bone Joint Surg Br 2009;91(07):922-927 evaluated 607 patients and concluded that the delay in performing the surgical treatment increased the length of hospital stay, which was related to medical comorbidities, age, gender and type of fracture.

We also identified a percentage increase in in-hospital deaths when comparing the two study groups, which is possibly associated with the medical conditions of the patients and with the lower number of patients operated after the implementation of the protocol.

As limitations of the present study, we emphasize that this is a retrospective analysis, with a small sample when compared with large multicenter studies.

Future studies will be performed with an increased sample population operated under the implemented protocol.

Conclusion

The ideal timing for surgical treatment of proximal femoral fractures in elderly patients is still controversial. Several factors may influence this decision, such as clinical comorbidities and the availability of equipment, a trained staff and a postoperative intensive care unit. The present study demonstrated that the length of hospital stay and the 6-month mortality rate in elderly patients tend to be reduced when the surgical treatment of proximal femoral fractures is performed within 48 hours of admission.

References

  • 1
    Zuckerman JD. Hip fracture. N Engl J Med 1996;334(23): 1519-1525
  • 2
    Orosz GM, Magaziner J, Hannan EL, et al. Association of timing of surgery for hip fracture and patient outcomes. JAMA 2004;291 (14):1738-1743
  • 3
    Simunovic N, Devereaux PJ, Sprague S, et al. Effect of early surgery after hip fracture on mortality and complications: systematic review and meta-analysis. CMAJ 2010;182(15):1609-1616
  • 4
    Panula J, Pihlajamäki H, Mattila VM, et al. Mortality and cause of death in hip fracture patients aged 65 or older: a populationbased study. BMC Musculoskelet Disord 2011;12:105
  • 5
    Schnell S, Friedman SM, Mendelson DA, Bingham KW, Kates SL. The 1-yearmortality of patients treated in a hip fracture program for elders. Geriatr Orthop Surg Rehabil 2010;1(01):6-14
  • 6
    Parker M, Johansen A. Hip fracture. BMJ 2006;333(7557):27-30
  • 7
    Koval KJ, Skovron ML, Aharonoff GB, Meadows SE, Zuckerman JD. Ambulatory ability after hip fracture. A prospective study in geriatric patients. Clin Orthop Relat Res 1995;(310):150-159
  • 8
    Koval KJ, Zuckerman JD. Functional recovery after fracture of the hip. J Bone Joint Surg Am 1994;76(05):751-758
  • 9
    Bottle A, Aylin P.Mortality associated with delay in operation after hip fracture: observational study. BMJ 2006;332(7547):947-951
  • 10
    Gdalevich M, Cohen D, Yosef D, Tauber C.Morbidity andmortality after hip fracture: the impact of operative delay. Arch Orthop Trauma Surg 2004;124(05):334-340
  • 11
    Perez JV,Warwick DJ, Case CP, Bannister GC. Death after proximal femoral fracture-an autopsy study. Injury 1995;26(04):237-240
  • 12
    Novack V, Jotkowitz A, Etzion O, Porath A. Does delay in surgery after hip fracture lead to worse outcomes? A multicenter survey. Int J Qual Health Care 2007;19(03):170-176
  • 13
    Rogers FB, Shackford SR, Keller MS. Early fixation reduces morbidity and mortality in elderly patients with hip fractures from low-impact falls. J Trauma 1995;39(02):261-265
  • 14
    Majumdar SR, Beaupre LA, Johnston DW, Dick DA, Cinats JG, Jiang HX. Lack of association between mortality and timing of surgical fixation in elderly patients with hip fracture: results of a retrospective population-based cohort study. Med Care 2006;44(06): 552-559
  • 15
    Grimes JP, Gregory PM, Noveck H, ButlerMS, Carson JL. The effects of time-to-surgery on mortality and morbidity in patients following hip fracture. Am J Med 2002;112(09):702-709
  • 16
    Siegmeth AW, Gurusamy K, Parker MJ. Delay to surgery prolongs hospital stay inpatients with fractures of the proximal femur. J Bone Joint Surg Br 2005;87(08):1123-1126
  • 17
    Franzo A, Simon G, Francescutti C.Mortality associatedwith delay in operation after hip fracture: ... but Italian data seem to contradict study findings. BMJ 2006;332(7549):1093
  • 18
    Khan SK, Kalra S, Khanna A, Thiruvengada MM, Parker MJ. Timing of surgery for hip fractures: a systematic review of 52 published studies involving 291,413 patients. Injury 2009;40(07):692-697
  • 19
    Lefaivre KA, Macadam SA, Davidson DJ, Gandhi R, Chan H, Broekhuyse HM. Length of stay, mortality, morbidity and delay to surgery in hip fractures. J Bone Joint Surg Br 2009;91(07):922-927
  • *
    Study performed at the Orthopedics and Traumatology Department, Escola Paulista de Medicina, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil. Originally Published by Elsevier Editora Ltda.

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    07 Oct 2019
  • Date of issue
    Jul-Aug 2019

History

  • Received
    15 Sept 2017
  • Accepted
    07 Dec 2017
Sociedade Brasileira de Ortopedia e Traumatologia Al. Lorena, 427 14º andar, 01424-000 São Paulo - SP - Brasil, Tel.: 55 11 2137-5400 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
E-mail: rbo@sbot.org.br