Newswise,
September 16, 2015 — Patients undergoing surgery for a hip fracture were older
and had more medical conditions than patients who underwent an elective total
hip replacement, factors that may contribute to the higher risk of in-hospital
death and major postoperative complications experienced by hip fracture surgery
patients, according to a study in the September 15 issue of JAMA.
Although
hip surgery can improve mobility and pain, it can be associated with major
postoperative medical complications and mortality. Patients undergoing surgery
for a hip fracture are at substantially higher risk of mortality and medical
complications compared with patients undergoing an elective total hip
replacement (THR).
The effect of older age and other medical conditions
associated with hip fracture on this increased risk has not been known,
according to background information in the article.
Yannick
Le Manach, M.D., Ph.D., of McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada and
colleagues examined if there was a difference in hospital mortality among
patients who underwent hip fracture surgery relative to an elective THR, after
adjustment for age, sex, and preoperative medical conditions.
Using the French
National Hospital Discharge Database, the researchers included patients older
than 45 years who underwent hip surgery at French hospitals from January 2010
to December 2013.
The International Statistical Classification of Diseases and
Related Health Problems, 10th Revision, codes were used to determine patients'
co-existing conditions and complications after surgery.
A
total of 690,995 eligible patients were included from 864 centers in France.
Patients undergoing elective THR surgery (n = 371,191) were younger, more
commonly men, and had less medical comorbidity compared with patients undergoing
hip fracture surgery.
Following hip fracture surgery (n = 319,804), 10,931
patients (3.4 percent) died before hospital discharge and 669 patients (0.18
percent) died after elective THR.
Analysis
of the matched populations (n = 234,314) demonstrated a higher risk of
mortality (1.8 percent for hip fracture surgery vs 0.3 percent for elective
THR) and of major postoperative complications (5.9 percent for hip fracture
surgery vs 2.3 percent for elective THR) among patients undergoing hip fracture
surgery.
“Patients
undergoing surgery for a hip fracture were older and had more comorbidities
than patients who underwent an elective THR, and these differences accounted
for some of the difference in outcomes between these groups,” the authors
write.
“If
the absolute risk increases of 1.51 percent for in-hospital mortality and 3.54
percent for major postoperative complications were modifiable, they would be
consistent with the number needed to treat of 59 patients for in-hospital
mortality and 28 patients for major postoperative complications. Hip fracture
may be associated with physiologic processes that are not present in
circumstances leading to elective THR and increase the risk of morbidity and
mortality following surgery.”
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