Time from injury to hip-fracture surgery in low-income and middle-income regions: a secondary analysis of data from the International Orthopaedic Multicentre Study in Fracture Care (INORMUS)

IF 13.4 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY Lancet Healthy Longevity Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1016/S2666-7568(24)00062-X
Elizabeth Armstrong MPH , Kris Rogers PhD , Chuan Silvia Li MSc , Jagnoor Jagnoor PhD , Paul Moroz MD , Gerald Chukwuemeka Oguzie MD , Samuel Hailu MD , Prof Theodore Miclau III MD , Fernando de la Huerta MD , Jose de Jesus Martinez-Ruiz MD , Fernando Bidolegui MD , Prof Junlin Zhou MD , Prof Xinlong Ma MD , Prof Bo Wu MD , Parag Sancheti PhD , La Ngoc Quang MD , Vali Baigi PhD , Mashyaneh Haddadi MD , Maoyi Tian PhD , Sheila Sprague PhD , Igor A. Escalante Elguezabal
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Escalante Elguezabal","doi":"10.1016/S2666-7568(24)00062-X","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><h3>Background</h3><p>Globally, fall-related injuries are a substantial problem, and 80% of fatal falls occur in low-income and middle-income countries. We aimed to measure time from injury to hip-fracture surgery in people aged 50 years or older living in low-income and middle-income regions, as well as to measure the proportion of patients with surgical stabilisation of their hip fracture within 72 h of admission to hospital and to identify risk factors associated with surgical delay.</p></div><div><h3>Methods</h3><p>For this secondary analysis, we analysed data collected from Africa, Latin America, China, India, and Asia (excluding China and India) for the International Orthopaedic Multicentre Study in Fracture Care (INORMUS) between March 29, 2014, and June 15, 2022. Patients from INORMUS were included in this analysis if they were aged 50 years or older and had an isolated, primary hip fracture sustained from a ground-level fall. Staff at participating hospitals identified patients with musculoskeletal injury and referred them for assessment of eligibility. We report time from injury to surgery as three distinct time periods: time from injury to hospital admission, time from admission to surgery, and a total time from injury to surgery. Date and time of injury were self-reported by patients at the time of study recruitment. If time to hospital admission after injury exceeded 24 h, patients reported the primary reason for delayed admission. Reasons for surgery, no surgery, and surgical delay were reported by the treating team. For patients undergoing surgery, multivariable regression analyses were used to identify risk factors for surgical delay.</p></div><div><h3>Findings</h3><p>4486 adults aged 50 years or older with an isolated, primary hip fracture were enrolled in INORMUS from 55 hospitals in 24 countries. Countries were grouped into five regions: Africa (418 [9·3%] of 4486), Latin America (558 [12·4%]), China (1680 [37·4%]), India (1059 [23·6%]) and Asia (excluding China and India; 771 [17·2%]). Of 4486 patients, 3805 (84·8%) received surgery. The rate of surgery was similar in all regions except in Africa, where only 193 (46·3%) of 418 patients had surgery. Overall, 2791 (62·2%) of 4486 patients were admitted to hospital within 24 h of injury. However, 1019 (22·7%) of 4486 patients had delayed hospital admission of 72 h or more from injury. The two most common reasons for delayed admission of more than 24 h were transfer from another hospital (522 [36·2%] of 1441) and delayed care-seeking because patients thought the injury would heal on its own (480 [33·3%]). Once admitted to hospital, 1451 (38·1%) of 3805 patients who received surgery did so within 72 h (median 4·0 days [IQR 1·7–6·0]). Regional variation was seen in the proportion of patients receiving surgery within 72 h of hospital admission (92 [17·9%] of 514 in Latin America, 53 [27·5%] of 193 in Africa, 454 [30·9%] of 1471 in China, 318 [44·4%] of 716 in Asia [excluding China and India], and 534 [58·6%] of 911 in India). Of all 3805 patients who received operative treatment, 2353 (61·8%) waited 72 h or more from hospital admission. From time of injury, the proportion of patients who were surgically stabilised within 72 h was 889 (23·4%) of 3805 (50 [9·7%] of 517 in Latin America, 31 [16·1%] of 193 in Africa, 277 [18·8%] of 1471 in China, 189 [26·4%] of 716 in Asia [excluding China and India], and 342 [37·5%] of 911 in India).</p></div><div><h3>Interpretation</h3><p>Access to surgery within 72 h of hospital admission was poor, with factors that affected time to surgery varying by region. Data are necessary to understand existing pathways of hip-fracture care to inform the local development of quality-improvement initiatives.</p></div><div><h3>Funding</h3><p>The National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, McMaster Surgical Associates, Hamilton Health Sciences, and the US National Institutes of Health.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":34394,"journal":{"name":"Lancet Healthy Longevity","volume":"5 8","pages":"Pages e552-e562"},"PeriodicalIF":13.4000,"publicationDate":"2024-08-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S266675682400062X/pdfft?md5=5dc7aa47625fc75db61bf34ba5fbbad1&pid=1-s2.0-S266675682400062X-main.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Lancet Healthy Longevity","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S266675682400062X","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Background

Globally, fall-related injuries are a substantial problem, and 80% of fatal falls occur in low-income and middle-income countries. We aimed to measure time from injury to hip-fracture surgery in people aged 50 years or older living in low-income and middle-income regions, as well as to measure the proportion of patients with surgical stabilisation of their hip fracture within 72 h of admission to hospital and to identify risk factors associated with surgical delay.

Methods

For this secondary analysis, we analysed data collected from Africa, Latin America, China, India, and Asia (excluding China and India) for the International Orthopaedic Multicentre Study in Fracture Care (INORMUS) between March 29, 2014, and June 15, 2022. Patients from INORMUS were included in this analysis if they were aged 50 years or older and had an isolated, primary hip fracture sustained from a ground-level fall. Staff at participating hospitals identified patients with musculoskeletal injury and referred them for assessment of eligibility. We report time from injury to surgery as three distinct time periods: time from injury to hospital admission, time from admission to surgery, and a total time from injury to surgery. Date and time of injury were self-reported by patients at the time of study recruitment. If time to hospital admission after injury exceeded 24 h, patients reported the primary reason for delayed admission. Reasons for surgery, no surgery, and surgical delay were reported by the treating team. For patients undergoing surgery, multivariable regression analyses were used to identify risk factors for surgical delay.

Findings

4486 adults aged 50 years or older with an isolated, primary hip fracture were enrolled in INORMUS from 55 hospitals in 24 countries. Countries were grouped into five regions: Africa (418 [9·3%] of 4486), Latin America (558 [12·4%]), China (1680 [37·4%]), India (1059 [23·6%]) and Asia (excluding China and India; 771 [17·2%]). Of 4486 patients, 3805 (84·8%) received surgery. The rate of surgery was similar in all regions except in Africa, where only 193 (46·3%) of 418 patients had surgery. Overall, 2791 (62·2%) of 4486 patients were admitted to hospital within 24 h of injury. However, 1019 (22·7%) of 4486 patients had delayed hospital admission of 72 h or more from injury. The two most common reasons for delayed admission of more than 24 h were transfer from another hospital (522 [36·2%] of 1441) and delayed care-seeking because patients thought the injury would heal on its own (480 [33·3%]). Once admitted to hospital, 1451 (38·1%) of 3805 patients who received surgery did so within 72 h (median 4·0 days [IQR 1·7–6·0]). Regional variation was seen in the proportion of patients receiving surgery within 72 h of hospital admission (92 [17·9%] of 514 in Latin America, 53 [27·5%] of 193 in Africa, 454 [30·9%] of 1471 in China, 318 [44·4%] of 716 in Asia [excluding China and India], and 534 [58·6%] of 911 in India). Of all 3805 patients who received operative treatment, 2353 (61·8%) waited 72 h or more from hospital admission. From time of injury, the proportion of patients who were surgically stabilised within 72 h was 889 (23·4%) of 3805 (50 [9·7%] of 517 in Latin America, 31 [16·1%] of 193 in Africa, 277 [18·8%] of 1471 in China, 189 [26·4%] of 716 in Asia [excluding China and India], and 342 [37·5%] of 911 in India).

Interpretation

Access to surgery within 72 h of hospital admission was poor, with factors that affected time to surgery varying by region. Data are necessary to understand existing pathways of hip-fracture care to inform the local development of quality-improvement initiatives.

Funding

The National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, McMaster Surgical Associates, Hamilton Health Sciences, and the US National Institutes of Health.

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低收入和中等收入地区从受伤到进行髋部骨折手术的时间:对国际骨折护理骨科多中心研究(INORMUS)数据的二次分析。
背景:在全球范围内,与跌倒有关的伤害是一个严重问题,80%的致命跌倒发生在低收入和中等收入国家。我们的目的是测量低收入和中等收入地区 50 岁及以上人群从受伤到接受髋部骨折手术的时间,以及测量在入院 72 小时内通过手术稳定髋部骨折的患者比例,并确定与手术延迟相关的风险因素:在这项二次分析中,我们分析了 2014 年 3 月 29 日至 2022 年 6 月 15 日期间为国际骨折护理骨科多中心研究(INORMUS)从非洲、拉丁美洲、中国、印度和亚洲(不包括中国和印度)收集的数据。INORMUS 研究中的患者如果年龄在 50 岁或以上,且因地面摔倒导致孤立性原发性髋部骨折,则可纳入本次分析。参与医院的工作人员会对肌肉骨骼损伤患者进行鉴定,并将其转诊以进行资格评估。我们将从受伤到手术的时间报告为三个不同的时间段:从受伤到入院的时间、从入院到手术的时间以及从受伤到手术的总时间。受伤日期和时间由患者在研究招募时自行报告。如果受伤后入院时间超过 24 小时,患者会报告延迟入院的主要原因。手术、未手术和手术延迟的原因由治疗小组报告。对于接受手术的患者,采用多变量回归分析来确定手术延迟的风险因素:来自 24 个国家 55 家医院的 4486 名年龄在 50 岁或以上、患有孤立性原发性髋部骨折的成人参加了 INORMUS。各国被分为五个地区:非洲(4486 人中有 418 人[9-3%])、拉丁美洲(558 人[12-4%])、中国(1680 人[37-4%])、印度(1059 人[23-6%])和亚洲(不包括中国和印度;771 人[17-2%])。在 4486 名患者中,3805 人(84-8%)接受了手术治疗。所有地区的手术率都差不多,但非洲除外,418 名患者中只有 193 人(46-3%)接受了手术。总体而言,4486 名患者中有 2791 人(62-2%)在受伤后 24 小时内入院。然而,在 4486 名患者中,有 1019 人(22-7%)在受伤后 72 小时或更长时间内延迟入院。延迟入院超过24小时的两个最常见原因是从其他医院转院(1441人中有522人[36-2%]),以及患者认为损伤会自行愈合而延迟就医(480人[33-3%])。入院后,3805 名患者中有 1451 人(38-1%)在 72 小时内接受了手术(中位数为 4-0 天[IQR 1-7-6-0])。入院 72 小时内接受手术的患者比例存在地区差异(拉丁美洲 514 例中有 92 例[17-9%],非洲 193 例中有 53 例[27-5%],中国 1471 例中有 454 例[30-9%],亚洲(不包括中国和印度)716 例中有 318 例[44-4%],印度 911 例中有 534 例[58-6%])。在所有 3805 名接受手术治疗的患者中,有 2353 人(61-8%)从入院起等待了 72 小时或更长时间。从受伤起 72 小时内接受手术治疗的患者比例为 3805 人中的 889 人(23-4%)(拉丁美洲 517 人中的 50 人(9-7%)、非洲 193 人中的 31 人(16-1%)、中国 1471 人中的 277 人(18-8%)、亚洲(不包括中国和印度)716 人中的 189 人(26-4%)和印度 911 人中的 342 人(37-5%)):入院后 72 小时内接受手术的机会较少,影响手术时间的因素因地区而异。要了解髋部骨折护理的现有途径,就必须掌握相关数据,以便为当地制定质量改进措施提供依据:资金来源:澳大利亚国家健康与医学研究委员会、加拿大健康研究所、麦克马斯特外科协会、汉密尔顿健康科学公司和美国国立卫生研究院。
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来源期刊
Lancet Healthy Longevity
Lancet Healthy Longevity GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
16.30
自引率
2.30%
发文量
192
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Lancet Healthy Longevity, a gold open-access journal, focuses on clinically-relevant longevity and healthy aging research. It covers early-stage clinical research on aging mechanisms, epidemiological studies, and societal research on changing populations. The journal includes clinical trials across disciplines, particularly in gerontology and age-specific clinical guidelines. In line with the Lancet family tradition, it advocates for the rights of all to healthy lives, emphasizing original research likely to impact clinical practice or thinking. Clinical and policy reviews also contribute to shaping the discourse in this rapidly growing discipline.
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