Abstract

e23061 Background: Cancer in the skeletal system, whether primary or metastatic, can cause fractures or impending fractures needing stabilization. Patients with pathologic fractures or impending fractures needing prophylactic fixation have lower home discharge rates than non-malignant hip fracture cases, a recognized quality metric. We initiated a single-center retrospective study to identify modifiable risk factors for improving home discharge rates in this population. Methods: We reviewed orthopedic surgery patients at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital (TJUH) from July 2020 to April 2023. We assessed demographics, living situation, admission-to-surgery time, surgery-to-physical therapy time, in-hospital complications, pathological fracture site, and weight-bearing status. Patients were stratified into discharge groups: home, subacute rehabilitation, and acute rehabilitation. Differences in rehabilitation facility versus home discharges were analyzed using pairwise two-sample t-tests and Fisher exact tests. Results: In this study, 102 cancer patients underwent orthopedic intervention at TJUH. The cohort comprised 57 women (55.9%), 67 non-Hispanic white individuals (63.7%), with median age of 66.6 (52.4-80.8). Living alone increased the likelihood of discharge to an acute rehabilitation facility compared to home (13 vs. 5, p<.001). Lower median age correlated with home discharge compared to subacute and acute discharge (age 62.4 vs. 74.7, p<0.001; 62.4 vs. 66.9, p<0.05). Higher in-hospital complications, like sepsis, were associated with acute rehabilitation discharge versus home (24 vs. 17, p<.05). Conclusions: These results link living alone, older age, and in-hospital complications to rehabilitation facility discharge. No modifiable risk factors for home discharge were identified. This study reinforces the importance of caregiver support for patient outcomes and high-quality care. In the future, we intend to investigate if the in-hospital complications were avoidable and, thus, modifiable. A larger patient cohort may be required to reveal potential areas for improvement. [Table: see text]

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