4.2 Article

A nationwide observational cohort study of the relationship between beta-blockade and survival after hip fracture surgery

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF TRAUMA AND EMERGENCY SURGERY
Volume 48, Issue 2, Pages 743-751

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00068-020-01588-7

Keywords

Hip fractures; Mortality; Beta-blockers

Funding

  1. Orebro University

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This study examines the impact of reducing the hyper-adrenergic state with beta-blocker therapy on mortality risk in patients undergoing emergency hip fracture surgery. The results show a significant survival benefit associated with beta-blockers in this setting. Further research is needed to validate these findings through interventional studies.
Purpose Despite advances in the care of hip fractures, this area of surgery is associated with high postoperative mortality. Downregulating circulating catecholamines, released as a response to traumatic injury and surgical trauma, is believed to reduce the risk of death in noncardiac surgical patients. This effect has not been studied in hip fractures. This study aims to assess whether survival benefits are gained by reducing the effects of the hyper-adrenergic state with beta-blocker therapy in patients undergoing emergency hip fracture surgery. Methods This is a retrospective nationwide observational cohort study. All adults >= 18 years were identified from the prospectively collected national quality register for hip fractures in Sweden during a 10-year period. Pathological fractures were excluded. The cohort was subdivided into beta-blocker users and non-users. Poisson regression with robust standard errors and adjustments for confounders was used to evaluate 30-day mortality. Results 134,915 patients were included of whom 38.9% had ongoing beta-blocker therapy at the time of surgery. Beta-blocker users were significantly older and less fit for surgery. Crude 30-day all-cause mortality was significantly increased in non-users (10.0% versus 3.7%, p < 0.001). Beta-blocker therapy resulted in a 72% relative risk reduction in 30-day all-cause mortality (incidence rate ratio 0.28, 95% CI 0.26-0.29, p < 0.001) and was independently associated with a reduction in deaths of cardiovascular, respiratory, and cerebrovascular origin and deaths due to sepsis or multiorgan failure. Conclusions Beta-blockers are associated with significant survival benefits when undergoing emergency hip fracture surgery. Outlined results strongly encourage an interventional design to validate the observed relationship.

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