Early surgery? In-house mortality after proximal femoral fractures does not increase for surgery up to 48 h after admission

被引:2
|
作者
Fenwick, Annabel [1 ]
Pfann, Michael [1 ]
Antonovska, Iana [1 ]
Mayr, Jakob [2 ]
Lisitano, Leonhard [1 ]
Nuber, Stefan [1 ]
Foerch, Stefan [1 ]
Mayr, Edgar [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hosp Augsburg, Dept Trauma Orthoped Plast & Hand Surg, Stenglinstr 2, D-86156 Augsburg, Germany
[2] Klinikum Ingolstadt GmbH, Zent Unfallchirurg & Orthopad, Krumenauerstr 25, D-85049 Ingolstadt, Germany
关键词
Complications; Early surgery; Proximal femur fracture; Mortality rate; HIP-FRACTURE; TIME; DELAY; EPIDEMIOLOGY; OPERATION; MORBIDITY; DEATH;
D O I
10.1007/s40520-023-02406-x
中图分类号
R592 [老年病学]; C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 100203 ;
摘要
PurposeThe economic cost linked to the increasing number of proximal femur fracture and their postoperative care is immense. Mortality rates are high. As early surgery is propagated to lower mortality and reduce complication rates, a 24-h target for surgery is requested. It was our aim to determine the cut-off for the time to surgery from admission and therefore establish a threshold at which the in-house mortality rate changes.MethodsA retrospective single-center cohort study was conducted including 1796 patients with an average age of 82.03 years treated operatively for a proximal femoral fracture between January 2016 and June 2020. A single treatment protocol was performed based on the type of anticoagulant, surgery, and renal function. Patient data, surgical procedure, time to surgery, complications, and mortality were assessed.ResultsIn-house mortality rate was 3.95%, and the overall complication rate was 22.7%. A prolonged length of hospital stay was linked to patient age and occurrence of complications. Mortality is influenced by age, number of comorbidities BMI, and postoperative complications of which the most relevant is pneumonia. The mean time to surgery for the entire cohort was 26.4 h. The investigation showed no significant difference in mortality rate among the two groups treated within 24 h and 24 to 48 h while comparing all patients treated within 48 h and after 48 h revealed a significant difference in mortality.ConclusionsAge and number of comorbidities significantly influence mortality rates. Time to surgery is not the main factor influencing outcome after proximal femur fractures, and mortality rates do not differ for surgery up to 48 h after admission. Our data suggest that a 24-h target is not necessary, and the first 48 h may be used for optimizing preoperative patient status if necessary.
引用
收藏
页码:1231 / 1239
页数:9
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