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Octogenarian and Nonagenarians Are at a Higher Risk for Experiencing Adverse 30-Day Outcomes Following ORIF for Ankle Fractures

CATEGORY: Ankle, Trauma INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: Despite an increasing number of elderly individuals undergoing surgical fixation for ankle fractures, few studies have investigated peri-operative outcomes and safety of surgery in an octogenarian and nonagenarian population (age >=80 years). Past lit...

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Autores principales: Malik, Azeem Tariq, Khan, Safdar N, Phieffer, Laura, Ly, Thuan V, Wiseman, Jessica, Sheridan, Elizabeth, Quatman, Carmen E
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8697182/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011419S00288
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author Malik, Azeem Tariq
Khan, Safdar N
Phieffer, Laura
Ly, Thuan V
Wiseman, Jessica
Sheridan, Elizabeth
Quatman, Carmen E
author_facet Malik, Azeem Tariq
Khan, Safdar N
Phieffer, Laura
Ly, Thuan V
Wiseman, Jessica
Sheridan, Elizabeth
Quatman, Carmen E
author_sort Malik, Azeem Tariq
collection PubMed
description CATEGORY: Ankle, Trauma INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: Despite an increasing number of elderly individuals undergoing surgical fixation for ankle fractures, few studies have investigated peri-operative outcomes and safety of surgery in an octogenarian and nonagenarian population (age >=80 years). Past literature has shown octogenarians to be a potentially vulnerable population that have drastically different adverse outcomes and higher resource utilization as compared to individuals below the age of 80 years. METHODS: The 2012-2017 American College of Surgeons – National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP) was queried using Current Procedural Terminology codes for patients undergoing open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) for isolated uni-malleolar (CPT-27766, CPT-27769, CPT-27792), bi-malleolar (CPT-27814) and tri-malleolar (CPT-27822, CPT-27823) ankle fractures. The study cohort was divided into three distinct groups for comparisons (Age <65 years, Age 65-79 years and Age=>80 years/octogenarians + nonagenarians). Multi-variate regression analyses were used to compare the independent effect of varying age groups on 30-day post-operative outcomes while controlling for differences in baseline clinical characteristics (age, gender, sex, race, fracture type/severity, open vs. closed fracture, admission status, BMI, co-morbidities, functional health status, ASA group and operative time). For comparison purposes, Age<65 years was taken as reference group in multi-variate regression models. RESULTS: A total of 19,585 patients were included – out of which 1,033 (5.3%) were octogenarians/nonagenarians (=>80 years). Following multivariate analysis, individuals aged =>80 years were at a significantly higher risk of 30-day wound complications (OR 1.84; p=0.019), pulmonary complications (OR 3.88; p<0.001), renal complications (OR 1.96; p=0.015), septic complications (OR 3.72; p=0.002), urinary tract infections (OR 2.24; p<0.001), bleeding requiring transfusion (OR 1.90; p=0.025), mortality (OR 7.44; p<0.001), readmissions (OR 1.65; p=0.004) and non-home discharge (OR 13.91; p<0.001). Individuals between the age of 65-79 years only had a higher risk of pulmonary complications (OR 2.30; p=0.004), urinary tract infections (OR 2.24; p<0.001), readmissions (OR 1.41; p=0.005) and non-home discharges (OR 3.55; p<0.001), with the effect sizes being small as compared to age >=80 years group. CONCLUSION: Based on the findings, it appears that octagenarians and nonagenarians (age =>80) are a fundamentally distinct and vulnerable age group that is at a higher risk of complications, readmissions, mortality and non-home discharges as compared to other geriatric (65-79 years) and non-geriatric (<65 years) patients. Providers should understand the importance of pre-operative counselling and risk-stratification in this vulnerable patient population.
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spelling pubmed-86971822022-01-28 Octogenarian and Nonagenarians Are at a Higher Risk for Experiencing Adverse 30-Day Outcomes Following ORIF for Ankle Fractures Malik, Azeem Tariq Khan, Safdar N Phieffer, Laura Ly, Thuan V Wiseman, Jessica Sheridan, Elizabeth Quatman, Carmen E Foot Ankle Orthop Article CATEGORY: Ankle, Trauma INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: Despite an increasing number of elderly individuals undergoing surgical fixation for ankle fractures, few studies have investigated peri-operative outcomes and safety of surgery in an octogenarian and nonagenarian population (age >=80 years). Past literature has shown octogenarians to be a potentially vulnerable population that have drastically different adverse outcomes and higher resource utilization as compared to individuals below the age of 80 years. METHODS: The 2012-2017 American College of Surgeons – National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP) was queried using Current Procedural Terminology codes for patients undergoing open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) for isolated uni-malleolar (CPT-27766, CPT-27769, CPT-27792), bi-malleolar (CPT-27814) and tri-malleolar (CPT-27822, CPT-27823) ankle fractures. The study cohort was divided into three distinct groups for comparisons (Age <65 years, Age 65-79 years and Age=>80 years/octogenarians + nonagenarians). Multi-variate regression analyses were used to compare the independent effect of varying age groups on 30-day post-operative outcomes while controlling for differences in baseline clinical characteristics (age, gender, sex, race, fracture type/severity, open vs. closed fracture, admission status, BMI, co-morbidities, functional health status, ASA group and operative time). For comparison purposes, Age<65 years was taken as reference group in multi-variate regression models. RESULTS: A total of 19,585 patients were included – out of which 1,033 (5.3%) were octogenarians/nonagenarians (=>80 years). Following multivariate analysis, individuals aged =>80 years were at a significantly higher risk of 30-day wound complications (OR 1.84; p=0.019), pulmonary complications (OR 3.88; p<0.001), renal complications (OR 1.96; p=0.015), septic complications (OR 3.72; p=0.002), urinary tract infections (OR 2.24; p<0.001), bleeding requiring transfusion (OR 1.90; p=0.025), mortality (OR 7.44; p<0.001), readmissions (OR 1.65; p=0.004) and non-home discharge (OR 13.91; p<0.001). Individuals between the age of 65-79 years only had a higher risk of pulmonary complications (OR 2.30; p=0.004), urinary tract infections (OR 2.24; p<0.001), readmissions (OR 1.41; p=0.005) and non-home discharges (OR 3.55; p<0.001), with the effect sizes being small as compared to age >=80 years group. CONCLUSION: Based on the findings, it appears that octagenarians and nonagenarians (age =>80) are a fundamentally distinct and vulnerable age group that is at a higher risk of complications, readmissions, mortality and non-home discharges as compared to other geriatric (65-79 years) and non-geriatric (<65 years) patients. Providers should understand the importance of pre-operative counselling and risk-stratification in this vulnerable patient population. SAGE Publications 2019-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8697182/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011419S00288 Text en © The Author(s) 2019 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License (http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) ) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Article
Malik, Azeem Tariq
Khan, Safdar N
Phieffer, Laura
Ly, Thuan V
Wiseman, Jessica
Sheridan, Elizabeth
Quatman, Carmen E
Octogenarian and Nonagenarians Are at a Higher Risk for Experiencing Adverse 30-Day Outcomes Following ORIF for Ankle Fractures
title Octogenarian and Nonagenarians Are at a Higher Risk for Experiencing Adverse 30-Day Outcomes Following ORIF for Ankle Fractures
title_full Octogenarian and Nonagenarians Are at a Higher Risk for Experiencing Adverse 30-Day Outcomes Following ORIF for Ankle Fractures
title_fullStr Octogenarian and Nonagenarians Are at a Higher Risk for Experiencing Adverse 30-Day Outcomes Following ORIF for Ankle Fractures
title_full_unstemmed Octogenarian and Nonagenarians Are at a Higher Risk for Experiencing Adverse 30-Day Outcomes Following ORIF for Ankle Fractures
title_short Octogenarian and Nonagenarians Are at a Higher Risk for Experiencing Adverse 30-Day Outcomes Following ORIF for Ankle Fractures
title_sort octogenarian and nonagenarians are at a higher risk for experiencing adverse 30-day outcomes following orif for ankle fractures
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8697182/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011419S00288
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