4.5 Article

Mortality in older adults following a fragility fracture: real-world retrospective matched-cohort study in Ontario

期刊

BMC MUSCULOSKELETAL DISORDERS
卷 22, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12891-021-03960-z

关键词

Fracture; Osteoporosis; Mortality; Real-world; Older adults

资金

  1. Amgen Canada Inc.

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This study found that the mortality rate was higher in adults aged over 65 after non-hip fractures caused by osteoporosis, especially within the first year post-fracture. The relative risk of mortality was 2.47 in women and 3.22 in men within 1 year post-fracture, with absolute mortality risk of 12.5% in women and 19.5% in men within one year post-fracture.
BackgroundRecent studies are lacking reports on mortality after non-hip fractures in adults aged >65.MethodsThis retrospective, matched-cohort study used de-identified health services data from the publicly funded healthcare system in Ontario, Canada, contained in the ICES Data Repository. Patients aged 66years and older with an index fragility fracture occurring at any osteoporotic site between 2011 and 2015 were identified from acute hospital admissions, emergency and ambulatory care using International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10 codes and data were analyzed until 2017. Thus, follow-up ranged from 2years to 6years. Patients were excluded if they presented with an index fracture occurring at a non-osteoporotic fracture site, their index fracture was associated with a trauma code, or they experienced a previous fracture within 5years prior to their index fracture. This fracture cohort was matched 1:1 to controls within a non-fracture cohort by date, sex, age, geography and comorbidities. All-cause mortality risk was assessed.ResultsThe survival probability for up to 6years post-fracture was significantly reduced for the fracture cohort vs matched non-fracture controls (p <0.0001; n =101,773 per cohort), with the sharpest decline occurring within the first-year post-fracture. Crude relative risk of mortality (95% confidence interval) within 1-year post-fracture was 2.47 (2.38-2.56) in women and 3.22 (3.06-3.40) in men. In the fracture vs non-fracture cohort, the absolute mortality risk within one year after a fragility fracture occurring at any site was 12.5% vs 5.1% in women and 19.5% vs 6.0% in men. The absolute mortality risk within one year after a fragility fracture occurring at a non-hip vs hip site was 9.4% vs 21.5% in women and 14.4% vs 32.3% in men.ConclusionsIn this real-world cohort aged >65years, a fragility fracture occurring at any site was associated with reduced survival for up to 6years post-fracture. The greatest reduction in survival occurred within the first-year post-fracture, where mortality risk more than doubled and deaths were observed in 1 in 11 women and 1 in 7 men following a non-hip fracture and in 1 in 5 women and 1 in 3 men following a hip fracture.

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