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Mortality and Financial Burden of Periprosthetic Fractures of the Femur

OBJECTIVE: This study examines patient factors to identify risks of 12-month mortality following periprosthetic femur fractures. Hospital charges were analyzed to quantify the financial burden for treatment modalities. METHODS: Data were retrospectively analyzed from a prospective database at a univ...

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Autores principales: Shields, Edward, Behrend, Caleb, Bair, Jeff, Cram, Peter, Kates, Stephen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4252153/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26246936
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2151458514542281
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author Shields, Edward
Behrend, Caleb
Bair, Jeff
Cram, Peter
Kates, Stephen
author_facet Shields, Edward
Behrend, Caleb
Bair, Jeff
Cram, Peter
Kates, Stephen
author_sort Shields, Edward
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: This study examines patient factors to identify risks of 12-month mortality following periprosthetic femur fractures. Hospital charges were analyzed to quantify the financial burden for treatment modalities. METHODS: Data were retrospectively analyzed from a prospective database at a university hospital setting. One-hundred and thirteen patients with a periprosthetic fracture of the proximal or distal femur were identified. Risk factors for 12-month mortality were analyzed, and financial data were compared between the various treatment modalities. RESULTS: In all, 14% of patients died (16 of 113) within 3 months and the 1-year mortality was 17.7% (20 of 113). Patients who died within 1 year had higher hospital charges (US$33 880 ± 25 051 vs US$22 886 ± 16 841; P = .01) and were older (87.6 ± 8.5 vs 81.5 ± 8.6; P = .004). Logistic regression analysis revealed age was the only significant predictor of 1-year mortality (P = .029, odds ratio 1.1). Analysis of financial data revealed 4 distinct groups (P < .05 between groups). Distal femoral revision arthroplasty (RA-DF) generated the highest hospital charges of US$91 035 ± 25 579 (n = 3). The second most highly charged group included proximal femoral fractures treated with revision arthroplasty (US$34 078 ± 17 832; n = 20) and hemi/total hip arthroplasty (THA; US$41 556 ± 23 651; n = 8). The third most charged group underwent open reduction internal fixation of the proximal (US$18 706 ± 6829; n = 35) and distal (US$22 381 ± 10 835; n = 35) femur. Nonoperative treatment generated the lowest charges (US$6426 ± 2899; n = 11). On average, the hospital lost money treating patients with RA-DF (US$−19 080 ± 2022 per patient) and hemi/THA (US$−6594 ± 9305 per patient), while all other treatment groups were profitable. CONCLUSION: One-year mortality after periprosthetic femur fractures was 17.7%, is mostly influenced by age, and 80% of deaths occur within 3 months. Patients treated with primary/revision arthroplasty generate more hospital charges than internal fixation. The average patient treated with revision arthroplasty of the distal femur or hemi/THA for a periprosthetic femur fractures resulted in net financial losses for the hospital.
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spelling pubmed-42521532015-12-01 Mortality and Financial Burden of Periprosthetic Fractures of the Femur Shields, Edward Behrend, Caleb Bair, Jeff Cram, Peter Kates, Stephen Geriatr Orthop Surg Rehabil Articles OBJECTIVE: This study examines patient factors to identify risks of 12-month mortality following periprosthetic femur fractures. Hospital charges were analyzed to quantify the financial burden for treatment modalities. METHODS: Data were retrospectively analyzed from a prospective database at a university hospital setting. One-hundred and thirteen patients with a periprosthetic fracture of the proximal or distal femur were identified. Risk factors for 12-month mortality were analyzed, and financial data were compared between the various treatment modalities. RESULTS: In all, 14% of patients died (16 of 113) within 3 months and the 1-year mortality was 17.7% (20 of 113). Patients who died within 1 year had higher hospital charges (US$33 880 ± 25 051 vs US$22 886 ± 16 841; P = .01) and were older (87.6 ± 8.5 vs 81.5 ± 8.6; P = .004). Logistic regression analysis revealed age was the only significant predictor of 1-year mortality (P = .029, odds ratio 1.1). Analysis of financial data revealed 4 distinct groups (P < .05 between groups). Distal femoral revision arthroplasty (RA-DF) generated the highest hospital charges of US$91 035 ± 25 579 (n = 3). The second most highly charged group included proximal femoral fractures treated with revision arthroplasty (US$34 078 ± 17 832; n = 20) and hemi/total hip arthroplasty (THA; US$41 556 ± 23 651; n = 8). The third most charged group underwent open reduction internal fixation of the proximal (US$18 706 ± 6829; n = 35) and distal (US$22 381 ± 10 835; n = 35) femur. Nonoperative treatment generated the lowest charges (US$6426 ± 2899; n = 11). On average, the hospital lost money treating patients with RA-DF (US$−19 080 ± 2022 per patient) and hemi/THA (US$−6594 ± 9305 per patient), while all other treatment groups were profitable. CONCLUSION: One-year mortality after periprosthetic femur fractures was 17.7%, is mostly influenced by age, and 80% of deaths occur within 3 months. Patients treated with primary/revision arthroplasty generate more hospital charges than internal fixation. The average patient treated with revision arthroplasty of the distal femur or hemi/THA for a periprosthetic femur fractures resulted in net financial losses for the hospital. SAGE Publications 2014-07-20 2014-12 /pmc/articles/PMC4252153/ /pubmed/26246936 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2151458514542281 Text en © The Author(s) 2014
spellingShingle Articles
Shields, Edward
Behrend, Caleb
Bair, Jeff
Cram, Peter
Kates, Stephen
Mortality and Financial Burden of Periprosthetic Fractures of the Femur
title Mortality and Financial Burden of Periprosthetic Fractures of the Femur
title_full Mortality and Financial Burden of Periprosthetic Fractures of the Femur
title_fullStr Mortality and Financial Burden of Periprosthetic Fractures of the Femur
title_full_unstemmed Mortality and Financial Burden of Periprosthetic Fractures of the Femur
title_short Mortality and Financial Burden of Periprosthetic Fractures of the Femur
title_sort mortality and financial burden of periprosthetic fractures of the femur
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4252153/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26246936
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2151458514542281
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