Clinical and Demographic Characteristics of Centenarians versus Other Age Groups Over 75 Years with Hip Fractures

The primary objective was to describe the clinical characteristics, management, and outcomes of centenarians with fragility hip fracture and compare them to other age groups. The secondary objective was to determine the variables associated with length of stay, in-hospital mortality and 30-day morta...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical interventions in aging 2023-01, Vol.18, p.441-451
Hauptverfasser: Bermejo Boixareu, Cristina, Ojeda-Thies, Cristina, Guijarro Valtueña, Ainhoa, Cedeño Veloz, Bernardo Abel, Gonzalo Lázaro, María, Navarro Castellanos, Laura, Queipo Matas, Rocío, Gómez Campelo, Paloma, Royuela Vicente, Ana, González-Montalvo, Juan Ignacio, Sáez-López, Pilar
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The primary objective was to describe the clinical characteristics, management, and outcomes of centenarians with fragility hip fracture and compare them to other age groups. The secondary objective was to determine the variables associated with length of stay, in-hospital mortality and 30-day mortality. This is a secondary analysis of the Spanish National Hip Fracture Registry. We included patients ≥75 years admitted for fragility hip fractures in 86 Spanish hospitals between 2017 and 2019, dividing the sample into four age groups. The variables studied were baseline characteristics, type of fracture, management, length of stay, in-hospital mortality and 30-day mortality. We included 25,938 patients (2888 were 75-79 years old; 14,762 octogenarians; 8,035 nonagenarians and 253 centenarians). Of the centenarians, 83% were women, 33% had severe dementia, 9% had severe dependency and 36% lived in residential care homes. Six out of ten had intertrochanteric fracture. Length of hospital stay was 8.6 days; in-hospital mortality was 10.3% and 30-day mortality 20.9%. Older age groups had more women, severe functional dependency, severe dementia, intertrochanteric fracture, living in care facilities and being discharged to nursing care. They had less frequent early mobilization, osteoporosis treatment and discharge to rehabilitation units. In-hospital and 30-day mortality were higher with increasing age. In centenarians, time to surgery >48 hours was independently associated with length of stay (correlation coefficient 3.99 [95% CI: 2.35-5.64; p
ISSN:1178-1998
1176-9092
1178-1998
DOI:10.2147/CIA.S386563