Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Institute for Informatics, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Injury. 2024 Nov;55(11):111927. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2024.111927. Epub 2024 Sep 27.
The literature lacks a large-scale study investigating the effect of surgical fixation timing on early mortality and morbidity outcomes in distal femur fractures. The aims of this study were to determine the effect of fixation timing on in-hospital mortality and morbidity outcomes for operatively treated distal femur fractures retrospectively using large database data.
This study is a retrospective analysis using data from the National Trauma Data Bank. Patients were stratified into a fragility cohort (age ≥ 60, ISS < 16) and polytrauma cohort (age < 60, ISS ≥16), with both cohorts analyzed separately. Within each cohort, patients were split into three fixation timing groups: within 24 h, between 24 and 48 h, and greater than 48 h from presentation to the hospital. Fixation-timing groups were compared based on the primary outcome of in-hospital mortality rate. Secondary outcomes included hospital length of stay (LOS), ICU length of stay (ICU LOS), days on a ventilator, and complications.
The fragility and polytrauma cohorts included 22,045 and 5,905 patients, respectively. The in-hospital mortality rate was 1.23 % in the fragility cohort and 2.56 % in the polytrauma cohort. Multivariate analysis of the fragility cohort showed that fixation greater than 48 h from time of presentation was associated with increased mortality compared to fixation within 24 h (OR 1.89, CI: 1.26-2.83, p=0.002) and between 24 and 48 h (OR 1.63, CI: 1.23-2.15, p<0.001). In the polytrauma cohort, multivariate analysis showed no significant mortality differences between fixation timing groups. Multivariate analysis of morbidity outcomes in both cohorts showed that fixation greater than 48 h was associated with increased LOS, ICU LOS, ventilator days, and complications compared to fixation within 24 h. In the polytrauma cohort, fixation between 24 and 48 h was associated with decreased LOS, ICU LOS, and complications compared to the other two timing groups.
Fixation of distal femur fractures before 48 h from presentation may lead to improved mortality and morbidity in older, lower injury severity patients. No significant mortality benefit was observed in younger, polytrauma fractures. Further prospective work is needed to validate these findings.
文献中缺乏大规模研究调查手术固定时机对股骨远端骨折早期死亡率和发病率结局的影响。本研究旨在使用大型数据库数据回顾性地确定固定时机对手术治疗股骨远端骨折的住院死亡率和发病率结局的影响。
本研究是对国家创伤数据库数据的回顾性分析。患者分为脆性组(年龄≥60 岁,ISS<16)和多发伤组(年龄<60 岁,ISS≥16),两个队列分别进行分析。在每个队列中,患者分为三组固定时间:24 小时内、24-48 小时内和就诊后 48 小时以上。根据主要结局住院死亡率比较固定时间组。次要结局包括住院时间(LOS)、重症监护室 LOS(ICU LOS)、呼吸机天数和并发症。
脆性组和多发伤组分别纳入 22045 例和 5905 例患者。脆性组的住院死亡率为 1.23%,多发伤组为 2.56%。脆性组的多变量分析显示,与 24 小时内固定相比,就诊后 48 小时以上固定与死亡率增加相关(OR 1.89,CI:1.26-2.83,p=0.002)和 24-48 小时(OR 1.63,CI:1.23-2.15,p<0.001)。在多发伤组中,多变量分析显示固定时间组之间无显著死亡率差异。两个队列的发病率结果多变量分析显示,与 24 小时内固定相比,就诊后 48 小时以上固定与 LOS、ICU LOS、呼吸机天数和并发症增加相关。在多发伤组中,与其他两组时间相比,24-48 小时固定与 LOS、ICU LOS 和并发症减少相关。
在就诊后 48 小时内固定股骨远端骨折可能会导致老年、低损伤严重程度患者的死亡率和发病率降低。在年轻的多发伤骨折中,没有观察到显著的死亡率获益。需要进一步的前瞻性研究来验证这些发现。