Clinical

Medical comanagement did not improve hip fracture outcomes


 

Background: Medical comanagement of hip fracture patients is common. Prior evidence comes from mostly single-center studies, with most improvements being in process indicators such as length of stay and staff satisfaction.

Dr. Sean M. Lockwood

Study design: Retrospective cohort study.

Setting: American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database.

Synopsis: With the NSQIP database targeted user file for hip fracture of 19,896 patients from 2016 to 2017, unadjusted analysis showed patients in the medical comanagement cohort were older with higher burden of comorbidities, higher morbidity (19.5% vs. 9.6%, odds ratio, 2.28; 95% CI, 1.98-2.63; P < .0001), and higher mortality rate (6.9% vs. 4.0%; OR, 1.79; 95% CI, 1.44-2.22; P < .0001). Both cohorts had similar proportion of patients participating in a standardized hip fracture program. After propensity score matching, patients in the comanagement cohort continued to show inferior morbidity (OR, 1.82; 95% CI, 1.52-2.20; P < .0001) and mortality (OR, 1.36; 95% CI, 1.02-1.81; P = .033).

This study failed to show superior outcomes in comanagement patients. The retrospective nature and propensity matching will lead to the question of unmeasured confounding in this large multinational database.

Bottom line: Medical comanagement of hip fractures was not associated with improved outcomes in the NSQIP database.

Citation: Maxwell BG, Mirza A. Medical comanagement of hip fracture patients is not associated with superior perioperative outcomes: A propensity score–matched retrospective cohort analysis of the National Surgical Quality Improvement Project. J Hosp Med. 2020;15:468-74.

Dr. Lockwood is a hospitalist and chief of quality, performance, and patient safety at the Lexington (Ky.) VA Health Care System.

Recommended Reading

CDC recommends use of Pfizer’s COVID vaccine in 12- to 15-year-olds
The Hospitalist
Postop palliative care may improve outcomes for those undergoing high-risk surgery
The Hospitalist
Simple risk assessment predicts post-PCI ischemic events
The Hospitalist
Accelerated surgery for hip fracture did not lower risk of mortality or major complications
The Hospitalist
Major musculoskeletal surgery in children with medically complex conditions
The Hospitalist
U.S. kidney transplants grow in number and success
The Hospitalist
Limited evidence for interventions to reduce post-op pulmonary complications
The Hospitalist
Study calls higher surgery costs at NCI centers into question
The Hospitalist
‘Lopioid protocol’ – low-dose opioids – proposed for fracture surgery
The Hospitalist
MDs doing wrong-site surgery: Why is it still happening?
The Hospitalist
   Comments ()