Cargando…

In Hospital and 3-Month Mortality and Functional Recovery Rate in Patients Treated for Hip Fracture by a Multidisciplinary Team

OBJECTIVES: Medical comorbidities affect outcome in elderly patients with hip fracture. This study was designed to preliminarily evaluate the usefulness of a hip-fracture unit led by an internal medicine specialist. METHODS: In-hospital and 3-month outcomes in patients with hip fracture were prospec...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rostagno, Carlo, Buzzi, Roberto, Campanacci, Domenico, Boccacini, Alberto, Cartei, Alessandro, Virgili, Gianni, Belardinelli, Andrea, Matarrese, Daniela, Ungar, Andrea, Rafanelli, Martina, Gusinu, Roberto, Marchionni, Niccolò
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4936690/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27389193
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0158607
_version_ 1782441594794803200
author Rostagno, Carlo
Buzzi, Roberto
Campanacci, Domenico
Boccacini, Alberto
Cartei, Alessandro
Virgili, Gianni
Belardinelli, Andrea
Matarrese, Daniela
Ungar, Andrea
Rafanelli, Martina
Gusinu, Roberto
Marchionni, Niccolò
author_facet Rostagno, Carlo
Buzzi, Roberto
Campanacci, Domenico
Boccacini, Alberto
Cartei, Alessandro
Virgili, Gianni
Belardinelli, Andrea
Matarrese, Daniela
Ungar, Andrea
Rafanelli, Martina
Gusinu, Roberto
Marchionni, Niccolò
author_sort Rostagno, Carlo
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Medical comorbidities affect outcome in elderly patients with hip fracture. This study was designed to preliminarily evaluate the usefulness of a hip-fracture unit led by an internal medicine specialist. METHODS: In-hospital and 3-month outcomes in patients with hip fracture were prospectively evaluated in 121 consecutive patients assessed before and followed after surgery by a multidisciplinary team led by internal medicine specialist; 337 consecutive patients were recalled from ICD-9 discharge records and considered for comparison regarding in-hospital mortality. RESULTS: In the intervention period, patients treated within 48 hours were 54% vs. 26% in the historical cohort (P<0.0001). In-hospital mortality remained stable at about 2.3 per 1000 person-days. At 3 months, 10.3% of discharged patients had died, though less than 8% of patients developed postoperative complications (mainly pneumonia and respiratory failure). The presence of more than 2 major comorbidities and the loss of 3 or more BADL were independent predictors of death. 50/105 patients recovered previous functional capacity, but no independent predictor of functional recovery could be identified. Mean length of hospital stay significantly decreased in comparison to the historical cohort (13.6± 4.7 vs 17 ± 5 days, p = 0.0001). Combined end-point of mortality and length of hospitalization < 12 days was significantly lower in study period (27 vs 34%, p <0.0132). CONCLUSIONS: Identification and stabilization of concomitant clinical problems by internal medicine specialists may safely decrease time to surgery in frail subjects with hip fracture. Moreover, integrated perioperative clinical management may shorten hospital stay with no apparent increase in in-hospital mortality and ultimately improve the outcome. These results are to be confirmed by a larger study presently ongoing at our institution.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4936690
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-49366902016-07-22 In Hospital and 3-Month Mortality and Functional Recovery Rate in Patients Treated for Hip Fracture by a Multidisciplinary Team Rostagno, Carlo Buzzi, Roberto Campanacci, Domenico Boccacini, Alberto Cartei, Alessandro Virgili, Gianni Belardinelli, Andrea Matarrese, Daniela Ungar, Andrea Rafanelli, Martina Gusinu, Roberto Marchionni, Niccolò PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVES: Medical comorbidities affect outcome in elderly patients with hip fracture. This study was designed to preliminarily evaluate the usefulness of a hip-fracture unit led by an internal medicine specialist. METHODS: In-hospital and 3-month outcomes in patients with hip fracture were prospectively evaluated in 121 consecutive patients assessed before and followed after surgery by a multidisciplinary team led by internal medicine specialist; 337 consecutive patients were recalled from ICD-9 discharge records and considered for comparison regarding in-hospital mortality. RESULTS: In the intervention period, patients treated within 48 hours were 54% vs. 26% in the historical cohort (P<0.0001). In-hospital mortality remained stable at about 2.3 per 1000 person-days. At 3 months, 10.3% of discharged patients had died, though less than 8% of patients developed postoperative complications (mainly pneumonia and respiratory failure). The presence of more than 2 major comorbidities and the loss of 3 or more BADL were independent predictors of death. 50/105 patients recovered previous functional capacity, but no independent predictor of functional recovery could be identified. Mean length of hospital stay significantly decreased in comparison to the historical cohort (13.6± 4.7 vs 17 ± 5 days, p = 0.0001). Combined end-point of mortality and length of hospitalization < 12 days was significantly lower in study period (27 vs 34%, p <0.0132). CONCLUSIONS: Identification and stabilization of concomitant clinical problems by internal medicine specialists may safely decrease time to surgery in frail subjects with hip fracture. Moreover, integrated perioperative clinical management may shorten hospital stay with no apparent increase in in-hospital mortality and ultimately improve the outcome. These results are to be confirmed by a larger study presently ongoing at our institution. Public Library of Science 2016-07-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4936690/ /pubmed/27389193 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0158607 Text en © 2016 Rostagno et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rostagno, Carlo
Buzzi, Roberto
Campanacci, Domenico
Boccacini, Alberto
Cartei, Alessandro
Virgili, Gianni
Belardinelli, Andrea
Matarrese, Daniela
Ungar, Andrea
Rafanelli, Martina
Gusinu, Roberto
Marchionni, Niccolò
In Hospital and 3-Month Mortality and Functional Recovery Rate in Patients Treated for Hip Fracture by a Multidisciplinary Team
title In Hospital and 3-Month Mortality and Functional Recovery Rate in Patients Treated for Hip Fracture by a Multidisciplinary Team
title_full In Hospital and 3-Month Mortality and Functional Recovery Rate in Patients Treated for Hip Fracture by a Multidisciplinary Team
title_fullStr In Hospital and 3-Month Mortality and Functional Recovery Rate in Patients Treated for Hip Fracture by a Multidisciplinary Team
title_full_unstemmed In Hospital and 3-Month Mortality and Functional Recovery Rate in Patients Treated for Hip Fracture by a Multidisciplinary Team
title_short In Hospital and 3-Month Mortality and Functional Recovery Rate in Patients Treated for Hip Fracture by a Multidisciplinary Team
title_sort in hospital and 3-month mortality and functional recovery rate in patients treated for hip fracture by a multidisciplinary team
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4936690/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27389193
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0158607
work_keys_str_mv AT rostagnocarlo inhospitaland3monthmortalityandfunctionalrecoveryrateinpatientstreatedforhipfracturebyamultidisciplinaryteam
AT buzziroberto inhospitaland3monthmortalityandfunctionalrecoveryrateinpatientstreatedforhipfracturebyamultidisciplinaryteam
AT campanaccidomenico inhospitaland3monthmortalityandfunctionalrecoveryrateinpatientstreatedforhipfracturebyamultidisciplinaryteam
AT boccacinialberto inhospitaland3monthmortalityandfunctionalrecoveryrateinpatientstreatedforhipfracturebyamultidisciplinaryteam
AT carteialessandro inhospitaland3monthmortalityandfunctionalrecoveryrateinpatientstreatedforhipfracturebyamultidisciplinaryteam
AT virgiligianni inhospitaland3monthmortalityandfunctionalrecoveryrateinpatientstreatedforhipfracturebyamultidisciplinaryteam
AT belardinelliandrea inhospitaland3monthmortalityandfunctionalrecoveryrateinpatientstreatedforhipfracturebyamultidisciplinaryteam
AT matarresedaniela inhospitaland3monthmortalityandfunctionalrecoveryrateinpatientstreatedforhipfracturebyamultidisciplinaryteam
AT ungarandrea inhospitaland3monthmortalityandfunctionalrecoveryrateinpatientstreatedforhipfracturebyamultidisciplinaryteam
AT rafanellimartina inhospitaland3monthmortalityandfunctionalrecoveryrateinpatientstreatedforhipfracturebyamultidisciplinaryteam
AT gusinuroberto inhospitaland3monthmortalityandfunctionalrecoveryrateinpatientstreatedforhipfracturebyamultidisciplinaryteam
AT marchionniniccolo inhospitaland3monthmortalityandfunctionalrecoveryrateinpatientstreatedforhipfracturebyamultidisciplinaryteam