Jamieson Trauma Institute, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Metro North Health, Brisbane, Australia.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Brisbane, Australia.
Bone Joint J. 2024 Jan 1;106-B(1):77-85. doi: 10.1302/0301-620X.106B1.BJJ-2023-0279.R2.
The aim of this study was to perform the first population-based description of the epidemiological and health economic burden of fracture-related infection (FRI).
This is a retrospective cohort study of operatively managed orthopaedic trauma patients from 1 January 2007 to 31 December 2016, performed in Queensland, Australia. Record linkage was used to develop a person-centric, population-based dataset incorporating routinely collected administrative, clinical, and health economic information. The FRI group consisted of patients with International Classification of Disease 10th Revision diagnosis codes for deep infection associated with an implanted device within two years following surgery, while all others were deemed not infected. Demographic and clinical variables, as well as healthcare utilization costs, were compared.
There were 111,402 patients operatively managed for orthopaedic trauma, with 2,775 of these (2.5%) complicated by FRI. The development of FRI had a statistically significant association with older age, male sex, residing in rural/remote areas, Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander background, lower socioeconomic status, road traffic accident, work-related injuries, open fractures, anatomical region (lower limb, spine, pelvis), high injury severity, requiring soft-tissue coverage, and medical comorbidities (univariate analysis). Patients with FRI had an eight-times longer median inpatient length of stay (24 days vs 3 days), and a 2.8-times higher mean estimated inpatient hospitalization cost (AU$56,565 vs AU$19,773) compared with uninfected patients. The total estimated inpatient cost of the FRI cohort to the healthcare system was AU$156.9 million over the ten-year period.
The results of this study advocate for improvements in trauma care and infection management, address social determinants of health, and highlight the upside potential to improve prevention and treatment strategies.
本研究旨在对与骨折相关感染(FRI)的流行病学和健康经济负担进行首次基于人群的描述。
这是一项回顾性队列研究,纳入了 2007 年 1 月 1 日至 2016 年 12 月 31 日期间在澳大利亚昆士兰州接受手术治疗的骨科创伤患者。采用记录链接的方法构建了一个以人为中心的、基于人群的数据集,纳入了常规收集的管理、临床和健康经济信息。FRI 组由术后两年内与植入物相关的深部感染的国际疾病分类第 10 版诊断代码的患者组成,而其他所有患者均被认为未感染。比较了人口统计学和临床变量以及医疗保健利用成本。
共有 111402 例患者接受了骨科创伤手术治疗,其中 2775 例(2.5%)并发 FRI。FRI 的发生与年龄较大、男性、居住在农村/偏远地区、土著或托雷斯海峡岛民背景、社会经济地位较低、道路交通事故、工作相关伤害、开放性骨折、解剖部位(下肢、脊柱、骨盆)、较高的损伤严重程度、需要软组织覆盖以及合并医疗合并症有关(单因素分析)。与未感染的患者相比,FRI 患者的中位住院时间延长了 8 倍(24 天 vs 3 天),平均估计住院费用增加了 2.8 倍(澳元 56565 澳元 vs 澳元 19773 澳元)。在十年期间,FRI 队列给医疗系统带来的总估计住院费用为 1.569 亿澳元。
本研究结果主张改进创伤护理和感染管理,解决健康的社会决定因素,并强调改善预防和治疗策略的潜力。