| Literature DB >> 32867779 |
Lauren J Scott1,2, Tim Jones3,4, Michael R Whitehouse5,6,7, Peter W Robinson7, William Hollingworth3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evidence on the most effective and cost-effective management of ankle fractures is sparse but evolving. A recent large RCT in older patients with unstable fractures found that management with close-contact-casting was functionally equivalent and more cost-effective than internal fixation. We describe temporal and geographic variation in ankle fracture management and estimate the potential savings if close-contact-casting was used more often in older patients.Entities:
Keywords: Ankle fracture; Close-contact-casting; England; Extramedullary fixation; Hospital admission; Intramedullary fixation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32867779 PMCID: PMC7457765 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-020-05682-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Patient flowchart. *Patients with primary diagnoses of fractures of the lower end of tibia (S823; n = 49,478), fibular alone (S824; n = 32,609), and lower leg part unspecified (S829; n = 730) were not considered for this analysis as codes were not sufficiently specific. ** 1560 intramedullary, 6941 extramedullary, 500 internal (unspecified), and 112 external fixations occurred during planned readmissions in patients who had no surgical fixation on their index admissions
Demographics of all patients with an index admission (n = 203,261)
| n | % | |
|---|---|---|
| 16–39 years | 62,382 | 30.7% |
| 40–59 years | 61,338 | 30.2% |
| 60–79 years | 56,998 | 28.0% |
| 80+ years | 22,530 | 11.1% |
| Male | 86,238 | 42.4% |
| Female | 117,012 | 57.6% |
| Lateral malleolus | 52,914 | 26.0% |
| Medial malleolus | 21,784 | 10.7% |
| Bi/tri malleolar or Maisonneuve’s | 128,563 | 63.3% |
aData missing for 13 patients. bData missing for 11 patients
Incidence of admissions for ankle fractures in 2016/17 by age and sex
| Male | Female | Overall | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age group | n | n per 100,000 people | n | n per 100,000 people | n | n per 100,000 people |
| 16–39 years | 3452 | 39.6 | 2331 | 27.3 | 5784 | 33.5 |
| 40–59 years | 2436 | 33.6 | 3499 | 47.2 | 5935 | 40.5 |
| 60–79 years | 1593 | 32.7 | 4119 | 78.2 | 5712 | 56.3 |
| 80+ years | 450 | 42.6 | 1955 | 120.8 | 2405 | 90.0 |
| Overall | 7933 | 36.2 | 11,908 | 52.2 | 19,842 | 44.4 |
Note. One person was missing sex data and six people were missing age data and as such are missing from the age/sex specific numbers. However, they are included in the overall numbers where possible, so column and row totals do not quite add up
Fig. 2Fracture management by age
Fig. 3Internal fixations over time by age group. a Rates per 100,000 people, b Incidence rate ratios (IRRs) from Poisson regression
Fig. 4Proportion of internal fixations which are intramedullary over time by age group
Fig. 5Proportion of admissions which are day cases over time by age group
Fig. 6Geographical variation of surgical fixations. a Any surgical fixation, b Intramedullary fixations. Figures show indirectly standardised rate ratios and include data from 2012/13–2016/17. These figures were created using ArcMap software with the University of Bristol’s advanced, concurrent-use licence for ArcGis software (see methods for details)