Abstract

Meta-analyses of randomized clinical trials suggest that the advantages and risks of surgery compared with conservative management as the initial treatment for proximal humerus fracture (PHF) vary, or are heterogeneous across patients. Substantial geographic variation in surgery rates for PHF suggests that the optimal rate of surgery across the population of patients with PHF is unknown. To use geographic variation in treatment rates to assess the outcomes associated with higher rates of surgery for patients with PHF. This comparative effectiveness research study analyzed all fee-for-service Medicare beneficiaries with proximal humerus fracture in 2011 who were continuously enrolled in Medicare Parts A and B for the 365-day period before and immediately after their index fracture. Data analysis was performed January through June 2019. Undergoing 1 of the commonly used surgical procedures in the 60 days after an index fracture diagnosis. Risk-adjusted area surgery ratios were created for each hospital referral region as a measure of local area practice styles. Instrumental variable approaches were used to assess the association between higher surgery rates and adverse events, mortality risk, and cost at 1 year from Medicare's perspective for patients with PHF in 2011. Instrumental variable models were stratified by age, comorbidities, and frailty. Instrumental variable estimates were compared with estimates from risk-adjusted regression models. The final cohort included 72 823 patients (mean [SD] age, 80.0 [7.9] years; 13 958 [19.2%] men). The proportion of patients treated surgically ranged from 1.8% to 33.3% across hospital referral regions in the United States. Compared with conservatively managed patients, surgical patients were younger (mean [SD] age, 80.4 [8.1] years vs 78.0 [7.2] years; P < .001) and healthier (Charlson Comorbidity Index score of 0, 14 863 [24.4%] patients vs 3468 [29.1%] patients; Function-Related Indicator score of 0, 20 720 [34.0%] patients vs 4980 [41.8%] patients; P < .001 for both), and a larger proportion were women (49 030 [80.5%] patients vs 9835 [82.5%] patients; P < .001). Instrumental variable analysis showed that higher rates of surgery were associated with increased total costs ($8913) during the treatment period, increased adverse event rates (a 1-percentage point increase in the surgery rate was associated with a 0.19-percentage point increase in the 1-year adverse event rate; β = 0.19; 95% CI, 0.09-0.27; P < .001), and increased mortality risk (a 1-percentage point increase in the surgery rate was associated with a 0.09-percentage point increase in the 1-year mortality rate; β = 0.09; 95% CI, 0.04-0.15; P < .01). Instrumental variable mortality results were even more striking for older patients and those with higher comorbidity burdens and greater frailty. Risk-adjusted estimates suggested that surgical patients had higher costs (increase of $17 278) and more adverse events (a 1-percentage point increase in the surgery rate was associated with a 0.12-percentage point increase in the 1-year adverse event rate; β = 0.12; 95% CI, 0.11 to 0.13; P < .001) but lower risk of mortality after PHF (a 1-percentage point increase in the surgery rate was associated with a 0.01-percentage point decrease in the 1-year mortality rate; β = -0.01; 95% CI, -0.015 to -0.005; P < .001). This study found that higher rates of surgery for treatment of patients with PHF were associated with increased costs, adverse event rates, and risk of mortality. Orthopedic surgeons should be aware of the harms of extending the use of surgery to more clinically vulnerable patient subgroups.

Highlights

  • A meta-analysis[1] of existing randomized clinical trials suggests that the benefits and risks of surgery compared with conservative management vary, or are heterogeneous, across patients with proximal humerus fracture (PHF)

  • Instrumental variable analysis showed that higher rates of surgery were associated with increased total costs ($8913) during the treatment period, increased adverse event rates (a 1–percentage point increase in the surgery rate was associated with a 0.19–percentage point increase in the 1-year adverse event rate; β = 0.19; 95% CI, 0.09-0.27; P < .001), and increased mortality risk (a 1–percentage point increase in the surgery rate was associated with a 0.09–percentage point increase in the 1-year mortality rate; β = 0.09; 95% CI, 0.04-0.15; P < .01)

  • This study found that higher rates of surgery for treatment of patients with PHF were associated with increased costs, adverse event rates, and risk of mortality

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Summary

Introduction

A meta-analysis[1] of existing randomized clinical trials suggests that the benefits and risks of surgery compared with conservative management vary, or are heterogeneous, across patients with proximal humerus fracture (PHF). Instrumental variable estimators using local area surgery rates as instruments provide a natural empirical approach to address this question. Instrumental variable estimators yield estimates that are directly generalizable to patients with PHF on the extensive margin, or the set of patients with PHF whose surgery choice is sensitive to local area surgery practices.[13,15,16,17,18,19,20] Instrumental variable estimators have been used to assess mortality after treatment for hip fracture.[21] They are contrasted with risk-adjusted regression (RAR) estimates, which provide information on surgery outcomes for the patients who underwent surgery in our data.[13,15,16,17,18,19,20]

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