Nonoperative management of hip fractures in very frail elderly patients may lead to a predictable short survival as part of advance care planning

Background and purpose — Surgical treatment is still the mainstay of care even in very frail elderly hip fracture patients. However, one may argue whether surgery is in the best interest of all patients. We elucidated mortality rates of nonoperative management (NOM) of a hip fracture after shared de...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hugo H Wijnen, Peter P Schmitz, Houda Es-Safraouy, Lian A Roovers, Diana G Taekema, Job L C Van Susante
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-07-01
Series:Acta Orthopaedica
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17453674.2021.1959155
id doaj-98c6eb937f8442a18f3b9833f62b226c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-98c6eb937f8442a18f3b9833f62b226c2021-08-09T15:50:07ZengTaylor & Francis GroupActa Orthopaedica1745-36741745-36822021-07-01001510.1080/17453674.2021.19591551959155Nonoperative management of hip fractures in very frail elderly patients may lead to a predictable short survival as part of advance care planningHugo H Wijnen0Peter P Schmitz1Houda Es-Safraouy2Lian A Roovers3Diana G Taekema4Job L C Van Susante5Department of Clinical Geriatrics, RijnstateDepartment of Orthopedics, RijnstateDepartment of Clinical Geriatrics, RijnstateClinical Research Department, RijnstateDepartment of Clinical Geriatrics, RijnstateDepartment of Orthopedics, RijnstateBackground and purpose — Surgical treatment is still the mainstay of care even in very frail elderly hip fracture patients. However, one may argue whether surgery is in the best interest of all patients. We elucidated mortality rates of nonoperative management (NOM) of a hip fracture after shared decision-making in a cohort of very frail elderly patients. Patients and methods — Orthogeriatric patients (age > 70 years) admitted with a hip fracture between 2011 and 2019 were included. In the presence of fragility features the motivation for surgery or NOM was supported by advance care planning (ACP) and shared decision-making through geriatric assessment. Mortality rates after NOM were assessed and also presented for the remaining surgical group for reference. Results — In 1,279 out of 3,467 patients, geriatric assessment was indicated and subsequently 1,188 (93%) had surgery versus 91 (7%) NOM. The motivation for NOM was based on patient and family preferences in only 20% of patients, medical grounds in 54%, and a combination of both in 26%. The 30-day and 1-year mortality in the frail NOM group was 87% and 99% respectively, whereas this was 7% and 28% in the surgery group. No statistical comparison between groups was performed due to profound bias by indication. Interpretation — This study provides further insight into the predictable and high short-term mortality after NOM in carefully selected very frail elderly hip fracture patients. This information may help to consider NOM as an alternative treatment option to surgery when no significant gain from surgery is anticipated.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17453674.2021.1959155
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hugo H Wijnen
Peter P Schmitz
Houda Es-Safraouy
Lian A Roovers
Diana G Taekema
Job L C Van Susante
spellingShingle Hugo H Wijnen
Peter P Schmitz
Houda Es-Safraouy
Lian A Roovers
Diana G Taekema
Job L C Van Susante
Nonoperative management of hip fractures in very frail elderly patients may lead to a predictable short survival as part of advance care planning
Acta Orthopaedica
author_facet Hugo H Wijnen
Peter P Schmitz
Houda Es-Safraouy
Lian A Roovers
Diana G Taekema
Job L C Van Susante
author_sort Hugo H Wijnen
title Nonoperative management of hip fractures in very frail elderly patients may lead to a predictable short survival as part of advance care planning
title_short Nonoperative management of hip fractures in very frail elderly patients may lead to a predictable short survival as part of advance care planning
title_full Nonoperative management of hip fractures in very frail elderly patients may lead to a predictable short survival as part of advance care planning
title_fullStr Nonoperative management of hip fractures in very frail elderly patients may lead to a predictable short survival as part of advance care planning
title_full_unstemmed Nonoperative management of hip fractures in very frail elderly patients may lead to a predictable short survival as part of advance care planning
title_sort nonoperative management of hip fractures in very frail elderly patients may lead to a predictable short survival as part of advance care planning
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Acta Orthopaedica
issn 1745-3674
1745-3682
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Background and purpose — Surgical treatment is still the mainstay of care even in very frail elderly hip fracture patients. However, one may argue whether surgery is in the best interest of all patients. We elucidated mortality rates of nonoperative management (NOM) of a hip fracture after shared decision-making in a cohort of very frail elderly patients. Patients and methods — Orthogeriatric patients (age > 70 years) admitted with a hip fracture between 2011 and 2019 were included. In the presence of fragility features the motivation for surgery or NOM was supported by advance care planning (ACP) and shared decision-making through geriatric assessment. Mortality rates after NOM were assessed and also presented for the remaining surgical group for reference. Results — In 1,279 out of 3,467 patients, geriatric assessment was indicated and subsequently 1,188 (93%) had surgery versus 91 (7%) NOM. The motivation for NOM was based on patient and family preferences in only 20% of patients, medical grounds in 54%, and a combination of both in 26%. The 30-day and 1-year mortality in the frail NOM group was 87% and 99% respectively, whereas this was 7% and 28% in the surgery group. No statistical comparison between groups was performed due to profound bias by indication. Interpretation — This study provides further insight into the predictable and high short-term mortality after NOM in carefully selected very frail elderly hip fracture patients. This information may help to consider NOM as an alternative treatment option to surgery when no significant gain from surgery is anticipated.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17453674.2021.1959155
work_keys_str_mv AT hugohwijnen nonoperativemanagementofhipfracturesinveryfrailelderlypatientsmayleadtoapredictableshortsurvivalaspartofadvancecareplanning
AT peterpschmitz nonoperativemanagementofhipfracturesinveryfrailelderlypatientsmayleadtoapredictableshortsurvivalaspartofadvancecareplanning
AT houdaessafraouy nonoperativemanagementofhipfracturesinveryfrailelderlypatientsmayleadtoapredictableshortsurvivalaspartofadvancecareplanning
AT lianaroovers nonoperativemanagementofhipfracturesinveryfrailelderlypatientsmayleadtoapredictableshortsurvivalaspartofadvancecareplanning
AT dianagtaekema nonoperativemanagementofhipfracturesinveryfrailelderlypatientsmayleadtoapredictableshortsurvivalaspartofadvancecareplanning
AT joblcvansusante nonoperativemanagementofhipfracturesinveryfrailelderlypatientsmayleadtoapredictableshortsurvivalaspartofadvancecareplanning
_version_ 1721213668374347776