| Literature DB >> 26405636 |
Sanjeeve Sabharwal1, Helen Wilson2, Peter Reilly1, Chinmay M Gupte1.
Abstract
Medical research often defines a person as elderly when they are 65 years of age or above, however defining elderly age by chronology alone has its limitations. Moreover, potential variability in definitions of elderly age can make interpretation of the collective body of evidence within a particular field of research confusing. Our research goals were to (1) evaluate published orthopaedic research and determine whether there is variability in proposed definitions of an elderly person, and (2) to determine whether variability exists within the important research sub-group of hip fractures. A defined search protocol was used within PubMed, EMBASE and the Cochrane Library that identified orthopaedic research articles published in 2012 that stated within their objective, intent to examine an intervention in an elderly population. 80 studies that included 271,470 patients were identified and subject to analysis. Four (5 %) studies failed to define their elderly population. The remaining 76 (95 %) studies all defined elderly age by chronology alone. Definitions of an elderly person ranged from 50 to 80 years and above. The most commonly used age to define an elderly person was 65, however this accounted for only 38 (47.5 %) of studies. Orthopedic research appears to favor defining elderly age by chronology alone, and there is considerable heterogeneity amongst these definitions. This may confuse interpretation of the evidence base in areas of orthopaedic research that focus on elderly patients. The findings of this study underline the importance of future research in orthopaedics adopting validated frailty index measures so that population descriptions in older patients are more uniform and clinically relevant.Entities:
Keywords: Elderly age; Frailty; Methodology; Orthopaedics
Year: 2015 PMID: 26405636 PMCID: PMC4573966 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-015-1307-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Fig. 1Flow diagram showing systematic search strategy for study selection
Demographic description of the orthopaedic research in relation to region of development, orthopaedic sub-specialty and level of evidence
| Median age | Range | Standard deviation | Variance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Development region | ||||
| North America (n = 18) | 65 | 50–70 | 4.93 | 24.27 |
| Europe (n = 19) | 65 | 50–75 | 6.39 | 40.81 |
| Asia (n = 41) | 65 | 50–80 | 6.29 | 39.62 |
| South America (n = 1) | 65 | – | – | – |
| Africa (n = 1) | 65 | – | – | – |
| Sub-specialty | ||||
| Trauma (n = 45) | 65 | 50–80 | 5.88 | 34.61 |
| Upper limb (n = 4) | 62.5 | 50–65 | 7.07 | 50 |
| Pelvis/hip/knees (n = 11) | 65 | 50–75 | 6.71 | 50 |
| Spine (n = 19) | 65 | 50–75 | 5.52 | 30.52 |
| Foot and ankle (n = 1) | 70 | – | – | – |
| Level of evidence | ||||
| I | 65 | 60–67 | 3.61 | 13 |
| II | 65 | 60–75 | 5.48 | 30 |
| III | 65 | 50–80 | 5.96 | 35.56 |
| IV | 62.5 | 50–75 | 6.21 | 38.64 |
Fig. 2Column chart showing variability in definitions of elderly population according to chronological age
Sub-group analysis comparing hip fracture and non-hip fracture studies’ definitions of elderly age
| Median age | Range | Standard deviation | Variance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hip fracture studies (n = 24) | 65 | 50–80 | 6.08 | 36.83 |
| Non hip fracture studies (n = 52) | 65 | 50–75 | 5.90 | 34.83 |
| Comparison of data samples with a two tailed Man Whitney test |
| |||
Non-parametric analysis between the two groups reveals no significant difference between the two populations (p > 0.05). There were two studies in each group that are excluded from the results displayed in this table that failed to define the elderly population they were studying