In-hospital care, complications, and 4-month mortality following a hip or proximal femur fracture: the Spanish registry of osteoporotic femur fractures prospective cohort study

Prieto-Alhambra, D. ; Reyes, C. ; Sanz Sainz, M. ; Gonzalez-Macias, J. ; Delgado, L.G. ; Bouzon, C.A. ; Ganan, S.M. ; Miedes, D.M. ; Vaquero-Cervino, E. ; Bardaji, M.F.B. ; Ezquerra Herrando, L. ; Baztan, F.B. ; Ferrer, B.L. ; Perez-Coto, I. ; Bueno, G.A. ; Mora-Fernandez, J. ; Donate, T.E. ; Blasco, J.M.I. ; Aguado-Maestro, I. ; Saez-Lopez, P. ; Domenech, M.S. ; Climent-Peris, V. ; Rodriguez, A.D. ; Sardinas, H.K. ; Gomez, O.T. ; Serra, J.T. ; Caeiro-Rey, J.R. ; Cano, I.A. ; Carsi, M.B. ; Etxebarria-Foronda, I. ; Hernandez, J.D.A. ; Solis, J.R. ; Suau, O.T. ; Nogues, X. ; Herrera, A. (Universidad de Zaragoza) ; Diez-Perez, A.
In-hospital care, complications, and 4-month mortality following a hip or proximal femur fracture: the Spanish registry of osteoporotic femur fractures prospective cohort study
Resumen: We have characterised 997 hip fracture patients from a representative 45 Spanish hospitals, and followed them up prospectively for up to 4 months. Despite suboptimal surgical delays (average 59.1 hours), in-hospital mortality was lower than in Northern European cohorts. The secondary fracture prevention gap is unacceptably high at 85%. Purpose To characterise inpatient care, complications, and 4-month mortality following a hip or proximal femur fracture in Spain. Methods Design: prospective cohort study. Consecutive sample of patients >= 50 years old admitted in a representative 45 hospitals for a hip or proximal femur fragility fracture, from June 2014 to June 2016 and followed up for 4 months post-fracture. Patient characteristics, site of fracture, in-patient care (including secondary fracture prevention) and complications, and 4-month mortality are described. Results A total of 997 subjects (765 women) of mean (standard deviation) age 83.6 (8.4) years were included. Previous history of fracture/s (36.9%) and falls (43%) were common, and 10-year FRAX-estimated major and hip fracture risks were 15.2% (9.0%) and 8.5% (7.6%) respectively. Inter-trochanteric (44.6%) and displaced intra-capsular (28.0%) were the most common fracture sites, and fixation with short intramedullary nail (38.6%) with spinal anaesthesia (75.5%) the most common procedures. Surgery and rehabilitation were initiated within a mean 59.1 (56.7) and 61.9 (55.1) hours respectively, and average length of stay was 11.5 (9.3) days. Antithrombotic and antibiotic prophylaxis were given to 99.8% and 98.2% respectively, whilst only 12.4% received secondary fracture prevention at discharge. Common complications included delirium (36.1 %) and kidney failure (14.1%), with in-hospital and 4-month mortality of 2.1% and 11% respectively. Conclusions Despite suboptimal surgical delay, post-hip fracture mortality is low in Spanish hospitals. The secondary fracture prevention gap is unacceptably high at > 85%, in spite of virtually universal anti-thrombotic and antibiotic prophylaxis.
Idioma: Inglés
DOI: 10.1007/s11657-018-0515-8
Año: 2018
Publicado en: Archives of Osteoporosis 13, 1 (2018), 96 [11 pp]
ISSN: 1862-3522

Factor impacto JCR: 2.469 (2018)
Categ. JCR: ORTHOPEDICS rank: 24 / 76 = 0.316 (2018) - Q2 - T1
Categ. JCR: ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM rank: 93 / 145 = 0.641 (2018) - Q3 - T2

Factor impacto SCIMAGO: 0.813 - Orthopedics and Sports Medicine (Q2)

Tipo y forma: Article (Published version)
Área (Departamento): Área Traumatología y Ortopedia (Dpto. Cirugía,Ginecol.Obstetr.)

Creative Commons You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.


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