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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)

Authors :
Elizabeth Armstrong, MPH
Kris Rogers, PhD
Chuan Silvia Li, MSc
Jagnoor Jagnoor, PhD
Paul Moroz, MD
Gerald Chukwuemeka Oguzie, MD
Samuel Hailu, MD
ProfMD Theodore Miclau, III, MD
Fernando de la Huerta, MD
Jose de Jesus Martinez-Ruiz, MD
Fernando Bidolegui, MD
ProfMD Junlin Zhou, MD
ProfMD Xinlong Ma, MD
ProfMD Bo Wu, MD
Parag Sancheti, PhD
La Ngoc Quang, MD
Vali Baigi, PhD
Mashyaneh Haddadi, MD
Maoyi Tian, PhD
Sheila Sprague, PhD
ProfMD P J Devereaux, PhD
ProfMD Mohit Bhandari, PhD
ProfPhD Rebecca Ivers, PhD
Gordon Guyatt
Brad Petrisor
Lehana Thabane
Respicious Boniface
Bruce Browner
Andrew Pollak
Gerard Slobogean
Emil Schemitsch
Paula McKay
Kerry Tai
Diane Heels-Ansdell
Lisa Buckingham
Robyn Norton
Jing Zhang
Samina Parveen
Soumyadeep Bhaumik
Saam Morshed
Madeline C. Mackechnie
Zhentao Zhang
Yinghua Ma
Yanguo Qin
Sanbao Hu
Baochang Qi
Wenjie Dai
Xinyu Cai
Gang Rui
Hua Chen
Vijay Shetty
Sampat Dumbre Patil
Sanjay Patil
Sandeep Shrivastava
Ravi Mittal
Thilak Samuel Jepegnanam
Anupam Mahajan
Harvinder Singh Chhabra
Rajagopalan N
Rajkumar S. Amaravathi
Mandeep S. Dhillon
Asolie Chase
Neel M. Bhavsar
Soheil Saadat
Subin Byanjankar
Raja Irfan Qadir
Irewin Alagar Tabu
Wanjak Ponggsamakthai
Paphon Sa-ngasoongsong
Panchu Subramanian
Benjamin Muluku Ndeleva
Mark Lutomia
Fred Mathew Toboso Otseyeno
Geoffrey Chege Mwangi
Henry Tanyi Ndasi
Dominic Konadu-Yeboah
Gregory Firth
Paul Marealle
Rogers Temu
Tony Mutanda
Marcelo Rio
Jose Eduardo Quintero
Mauricio Zuluaga
Tomás Minueza
Ricardo Madrigal
Manuel Ylizaliturri
Mario Garuz
Julio Segovia Altieri
Igor A. Escalante Elguezabal
Source :
The Lancet. Healthy Longevity, Vol 5, Iss 8, Pp e552-e562 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2024.

Abstract

Summary: 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.

Subjects

Subjects :
Geriatrics
RC952-954.6
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26667568
Volume :
5
Issue :
8
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Lancet. Healthy Longevity
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.064fb811d5ac442fbef45fca822abc74
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/S2666-7568(24)00062-X