BMC Geriatrics (Sep 2023)

Orthogeriatric co-managements lower early mortality in long-lived elderly hip fracture: a post-hoc analysis of a prospective study

  • Feng Gao,
  • Gang Liu,
  • Yufeng Ge,
  • Zhelun Tan,
  • Yimin Chen,
  • Weidong Peng,
  • Jing Zhang,
  • Xinyi Zhang,
  • Jiusheng He,
  • Liangyuan Wen,
  • Xianhai Wang,
  • Zongxin Shi,
  • Sanbao Hu,
  • Fengpo Sun,
  • Zishun Gong,
  • Mingyao Sun,
  • Maoyi Tian,
  • Shiwen Zhu,
  • Minghui Yang,
  • Xinbao Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-023-04289-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Objective To evaluate the clinical effectiveness of orthogeriatric co-management care in long-lived elderly hip fracture patients (age ≥ 90). Methods Secondary analysis was conducted in long-lived hip fracture patients between 2018 to 2019 in 6 hospitals in Beijing, China. Patients were divided into the orthogeriatric co-management group (CM group) and traditional consultation mode group (TC group) depending on the management mode. With 30-day mortality as the primary outcome, multivariate regression analyses were performed after adjusting for potential covariates. 30-day mobility and quality of life were compared between groups. Results A total of 233 patients were included, 223 of whom completed follow-up (125 in CM group, 98 in TC group). The average age was 92.4 ± 2.5 years old (range 90–102). The 30-day mortality in CM group was significantly lower than that in TC group after adjustments for (2.4% vs. 10.2%; OR = 0.231; 95% CI 0.059 ~ 0.896; P = 0.034). The proportion of patients undergoing surgery and surgery performed within 48 h also favored the CM group (97.6% vs. 85.7%, P = 0.002; 74.4% vs. 24.5%, P 0.05). Conclusions For long-lived elderly hip fracture patients, orthogeriatric co-management care lowered early mortality, improved early mobility and compared with the traditional consultation mode.

Keywords