Older adult patients with hip fractures are 3-4 times more likely to die within one-year after surgery than general population. The study aimed to identify independent predictive factors associated with one-year mortality after hip fracture surgery. A prospective prognostic cohort study was performed. All patients aged >= 65 years, consecutively admitted in three Italian hospitals with a diagnosis of fragility hip fracture were included. Patients with periprosthetic or pathological fractures were excluded. Multivariate analysis was used to determine variables that significantly increased the risk of one-year mortality and Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis to assess their predictive capacity on the outcome.1083 patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria and the one-year follow-up was reached in 728 patients. The 16.6% of patients died within one-year after surgery. At the multivariate analysis, advancing age (OR =1.094, 95%Cl = 1.057-1.132), higher baseline Charlson Index (OR = 1.257, 95% CI =1.114-1.418) and Activities of Daily Living scores (OR = 1.259, 95% CI = 1.143-1.388), presence of hospital-acquired pressure ulcers (PUs) (OR = 1.579, 95% CI =1.002-2.489) and lack recovery of ambulation (OR= 1.736, 95% CI = 1.115-2.703), were found to be independent predictive factors of one-year mortality after surgery. The area under the ROC curve of the model was 0.780 (CI95% 0.737-0.824) for one-year mortality in elderly hip fractures patients. Early ambulation and careful long-term follow-up, with attention to frailty in elderly people, should be promoted.

One-year mortality after hip fracture surgery and prognostic factors: a prospective cohort study

Ambrosi, Elisa;
2019-01-01

Abstract

Older adult patients with hip fractures are 3-4 times more likely to die within one-year after surgery than general population. The study aimed to identify independent predictive factors associated with one-year mortality after hip fracture surgery. A prospective prognostic cohort study was performed. All patients aged >= 65 years, consecutively admitted in three Italian hospitals with a diagnosis of fragility hip fracture were included. Patients with periprosthetic or pathological fractures were excluded. Multivariate analysis was used to determine variables that significantly increased the risk of one-year mortality and Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis to assess their predictive capacity on the outcome.1083 patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria and the one-year follow-up was reached in 728 patients. The 16.6% of patients died within one-year after surgery. At the multivariate analysis, advancing age (OR =1.094, 95%Cl = 1.057-1.132), higher baseline Charlson Index (OR = 1.257, 95% CI =1.114-1.418) and Activities of Daily Living scores (OR = 1.259, 95% CI = 1.143-1.388), presence of hospital-acquired pressure ulcers (PUs) (OR = 1.579, 95% CI =1.002-2.489) and lack recovery of ambulation (OR= 1.736, 95% CI = 1.115-2.703), were found to be independent predictive factors of one-year mortality after surgery. The area under the ROC curve of the model was 0.780 (CI95% 0.737-0.824) for one-year mortality in elderly hip fractures patients. Early ambulation and careful long-term follow-up, with attention to frailty in elderly people, should be promoted.
2019
Hip Fractures, Mortality, Fracture surgery
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11562/1010389
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