4.5 Article

Hip fracture predicts subsequent hip fracture: a retrospective observational study to support a call to early hip fracture prevention efforts in post-fracture patients

期刊

OSTEOPOROSIS INTERNATIONAL
卷 33, 期 1, 页码 113-122

出版社

SPRINGER LONDON LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s00198-021-06080-5

关键词

Osteoporosis; Hip fracture; Imminent risk; Real-world data; Mortality; Healthcare resource utilization

资金

  1. Amgen Canada Inc.

向作者/读者索取更多资源

In this large retrospective cohort study, one in four patients experienced a subsequent hip fracture after any initial fracture, with the most common being hip fractures, occurring on average within 1.5 years. These findings emphasize the importance of early post-fracture interventions to reduce the risk of imminent hip fractures and the associated high costs.
A Summary In this real-world retrospective cohort, subsequent hip fracture occurred in one in four patients with any initial fracture, most often after hip fracture, on average within 1.5 years. These data support the need for early post-fracture interventions to help reduce imminent hip fracture risk and high societal and humanistic costs. Purpose This large retrospective cohort study aimed to provide hip fracture data, in the context of other fractures, to help inform efforts related to hip fracture prevention focusing on post-fracture patients. Methods A cohort of 115,776 patients (72.3% female) aged > 65 (median age 81) with an index fracture occurring at skeletal sites related to age-related bone loss between January 1, 2011, and March 31, 2015, was identified using health services data from Ontario, Canada, and followed until March 31, 2017. Results Hip fracture was the most common second fracture (27.8%), occurring in >= 19% of cases after each index fracture site and most frequently (33.0%) after hip index fracture. Median time to a second fracture of the hip was similar to 1.5 years post-index event. Patients with index hip fracture contributed the most to fracture-related initial surgeries (64.1%) and post-surgery complications (71.9%) and had the second-highest total mean healthcare cost per patient in the first year after index fracture ($62,793 +/- 44,438). One-year mortality (any cause) after index hip fracture was 26.2% vs. 15.9% in the entire cohort, and 25.9% after second hip fracture. Conclusion A second fracture at the hip was observed in one in four patients after any index fracture and in one in three patients with an index hip fracture, on average within 1.5 years. Index hip fracture was associated with high mortality and post-surgery complication rates and healthcare costs relative to other fractures. These data support focusing on early hip fracture prevention efforts in post-fracture patients.

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