Literature DB >> 29040134

Mortality by Timing of Hip Fracture Surgery: Factors and Relationships at Play.

Katie Jane Sheehan1, Boris Sobolev, Pierre Guy.   

Abstract

In hip fracture care, it is disputed whether mortality worsens when surgery is delayed. This knowledge gap matters when hospital managers seek to justify resource allocation for prioritizing access to one procedure over another. Uncertainty over the surgical timing-death association leads to either surgical prioritization without benefit or the underuse of expedited surgery when it could save lives. The discrepancy in previous findings results in part from differences between patients who happened to undergo surgery at different times. Such differences may produce the statistical association between surgical timing and death in the absence of a causal relationship. Previous observational studies attempted to adjust for structure, process, and patient factors that contribute to death, but not for relationships between structure and process factors, or between patient and process factors. In this article, we (1) summarize what is known about the factors that influence, directly or indirectly, both the timing of surgery and the occurrence of death; (2) construct a dependency graph of relationships among these factors based explicitly on the existing literature; (3) consider factors with a potential to induce covariation of time to surgery and the occurrence of death, directly or through the network of relationships, thereby explaining a putative surgical timing-death association; and (4) show how age, sex, dependent living, fracture type, hospital type, surgery type, and calendar period can influence both time to surgery and occurrence of death through chains of dependencies. We conclude by discussing how these results can inform the allocation of surgical capacity to prevent the avoidable adverse consequences of delaying hip fracture surgery.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 29040134     DOI: 10.2106/JBJS.17.00069

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am        ISSN: 0021-9355            Impact factor:   5.284


  19 in total

1.  Mortality effects of timing alternatives for hip fracture surgery.

Authors:  Boris Sobolev; Pierre Guy; Katie Jane Sheehan; Lisa Kuramoto; Jason M Sutherland; Adrian R Levy; James A Blair; Eric Bohm; Jason D Kim; Edward J Harvey; Suzanne N Morin; Lauren Beaupre; Michael Dunbar; Susan Jaglal; James Waddell
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2018-08-07       Impact factor: 8.262

2.  Hip fracture time-to-surgery and mortality revisited: mitigating comorbidity confounding by effect of holidays on surgical timing.

Authors:  Siu Him Janus Wong; Xinshuo Christian Fang; King Hang Dennis Yee; Tak Man Wong; Cheuk Ting Terence Pun; Tak Wing Lau; Ka Li Frankie Leung
Journal:  Int Orthop       Date:  2018-01-03       Impact factor: 3.075

Review 3.  Prognostic factors of in-hospital complications after hip fracture surgery: a scoping review.

Authors:  K J Sheehan; E M Guerrero; D Tainter; B Dial; R Milton-Cole; J A Blair; J Alexander; P Swamy; L Kuramoto; P Guy; J P Bettger; B Sobolev
Journal:  Osteoporos Int       Date:  2019-04-29       Impact factor: 4.507

4.  Prolonged hospital stay after arthroplasty for geriatric femoral neck fractures is associated with increased early mortality risk after discharge.

Authors:  Andrew M Schneider; Carlos Mucharraz; Steven Denyer; Nicholas M Brown
Journal:  J Clin Orthop Trauma       Date:  2022-02-02

5.  Analysis of Factors Affecting the Third- and Twelfth-Month Mortality in Patients with Hip Fractures Aged 80 Years and Older.

Authors:  Cafer Ö Hançerli; Ali Turgut; Can E Ünlü; Cemil Ertürk
Journal:  Indian J Orthop       Date:  2021-11-29       Impact factor: 1.251

6.  Risk factors for complications within 30 days of operatively fixed periprosthetic femur fractures.

Authors:  Raveesh D Richard; Greg E Gaski; Hassan Farooq; Daniel J Wagner; Todd O McKinley; Roman M Natoli
Journal:  J Clin Orthop Trauma       Date:  2022-06-25

7.  Do anticoagulants impact the "in-house mortality" after surgical treatment of proximal femoral fractures-a multivariate analysis.

Authors:  Annabel Fenwick; Michael Pfann; Jakob Mayr; Iana Antonovska; Andreas Wiedl; Stefan Nuber; Stefan Förch; Edgar Mayr
Journal:  Int Orthop       Date:  2022-07-26       Impact factor: 3.479

8.  Temporal Trends in Hip Fractures: How Has Time-to-Surgery Changed?

Authors:  Suresh K Nayar; Majd Marrache; Jarred A Bressner; Micheal Raad; Babar Shafiq; Uma Srikumaran
Journal:  Arch Bone Jt Surg       Date:  2021-03

9.  Survival bias may explain the appearance of the obesity paradox in hip fracture patients.

Authors:  R M Amin; M Raad; S S Rao; F Musharbash; M J Best; D F Amanatullah
Journal:  Osteoporos Int       Date:  2021-07-10       Impact factor: 4.507

10.  Do Disparities in Wait Times to Operative Fixation for Pathologic Fractures of the Long Bones and 30-day Complications Exist Between Black and White Patients? A Study Using the NSQIP Database.

Authors:  Micheal Raad; Varun Puvanesarajah; Kevin Y Wang; Claire M McDaniel; Uma Srikumaran; Adam S Levin; Carol D Morris
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2022-01-01       Impact factor: 4.755

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