Abstract

Purpose: Early mortality rate in geriatric patients after hip fractures remains very high. Determining the prognostic factors is crucial for decreasing early mortality. This study aimed to evaluate the prognostic risk factors affecting early mortality after hip fracture in the elderly.Methods: Medical records of 335 patients with age 70 years or older who sustained hip fractures which were treated by hemiarthroplasty or proximal femoral nailing between May 2017 and May 2019 were reviewed. Neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and platelet/lymphocyte ratio (PLR) were investigated for validity as the new prognostic markers. The other variables included age, gender, type of surgery, type of implant, type of anesthesia, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score, presence of comorbidities, delirium, length of hospital stay, time delay to surgery, number of erythrocyte transfusions, and laboratory data were assessed for 30-day, 90-day, and one-year mortality. Univariate analysis and logistic regression analysis were used to determine the associated mortality.Results: Thirty-day mortality rate was 10.4% and was associated with being aged ≥90 years (p-value: 0.013, odds ratio {OR}: 0.13) and ASA score of 4 (p-value: 0.019, OR: 0.22). Ninety-day mortality rate was 21.5% and was associated with age (p-value: 0.002), being aged 80-89 years (p-value: 0.032, OR: 0.43), being aged ≥90 years (p-value: 0.001, OR: 0.13), general anesthesia (p-value: 0.016, OR: 0.41), preoperative high NLR level (p-value: 0.028, OR: 1.05), high blood urea nitrogen (BUN) level (p-value: 0.049, OR:1.02). One year mortality rate was 33.7% and independent significant prognostic risk factors were determined as being aged ≥90 years (p-value: 0.003, OR: 0.23), length of hospital stay (p-value: 0.003, OR: 1.04), and preoperative serum albumin level (p-value: 0.037, OR: 0.6). The other evaluated risk factors were not independently found to be associated with all early mortality time.Conclusion: Patients at or over 90 years old were at risk for all early mortality time points. NLR which is a new and cheap biomarker can be used as a prognostic risk factor for 90-day mortality. The variable of PLR was not found valuable for early mortality.

Highlights

  • Hip fractures in elderly patients are a significant public health problem and mainly affect the elderly

  • In this study, which aimed to determine the prognostic factors for mortality in hip fracture patients, being aged ≥ 90 years and having an American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score of 4 were found to be associated with 30-day mortality; age, being aged 80-89 years, being aged ≥ 90 years, general anesthesia, high Neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and blood urea nitrogen (BUN) levels were all associated with 90-day mortality, while being aged ≥ 90 years, length of hospital stay, and preoperative albumin levels were associated with one-year mortality

  • We found that NLR was an independent prognostic risk factor, in both univariate and logistic regression analysis, for 90-day mortality, but it did not emerge as a significant prognostic factor for one-year mortality

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Summary

Introduction

Hip fractures in elderly patients are a significant public health problem and mainly affect the elderly. The many prognostic factors that the literature proposes may be related to death after hip fracture include age, male gender, comorbidities, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score, preinjury physical condition, cognitive status, type of fracture, type of surgery, time of delay to surgery, length of hospital stay, and albumin level [7,8]. Besides these standard factors, neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio (PLR) were newly defined parameters to predict mortality after hip fractures [9,10]. This study aimed to identify the standard and newly defined prognostic factors that could predict early mortality after treatment for hip fractures in elderly patients

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