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Understanding Mortality of Femoral Fractures Following Low-Impact Trauma in Persons With and Without Care Need
Authors:Tobias Bluhmki  Raphael Simon Peter  Kilian Rapp  Hans-Helmut König  Clemens Becker  Ivonne Lindlbauer  Dietrich Rothenbacher  Jan Beyersmann  Gisela Büchele
Institution:1. Department of Mathematics and Economics, Institute of Statistics, Ulm University, Ulm, Germany;2. Department of Medicine, Institute of Epidemiology and Medical Biometry, Ulm University, Ulm, Germany;3. Department for Geriatric Rehabilitation, Robert Bosch Krankenhaus, Stuttgart, Germany;4. Department of Health Economics and Health Services Research, University Medical Center, Hamburg, Germany
Abstract:

Objectives

Persons with osteoporotic fracture history are subject to an increased risk for subsequent fractures and mortality. The aim of this retrospective study was to investigate the impact of a previous osteoporotic low-impact (fragility) index fracture (eg, forearm, lower leg) on mortality of a subsequent femoral fracture.

Design

Retrospective cohort study.

Participants/measurements

Claims data of a German health insurance agency including >1.2 million insurants aged 65 years or older and observed between 2004 and 2009.

Methods

A multistate model was developed handling index fractures and care need as time-dependent exposures, while age was chosen as the underlying time scale. Excess risks were expressed as differences in cause-specific hazards. Nelson-Aalen estimates were used for their nonparametric estimation. Time-simultaneous statistical inference was based on confidence bands provided by wild bootstrap resampling.

Results

Excess femoral fracture risk increased with progressive age and was highest in persons with care need. It was observed starting from an age of 79 years in women and 85 years in men onward. A prior index fracture increased mortality after a femoral fracture by increasing femoral fracture risk, while leaving the hazard of death after a subsequent femoral fracture unchanged.

Conclusions

The results indicated that increased mortality of a subsequent femoral fracture is not triggered by an intrinsically increased mortality hazard but an increased femoral fracture incidence.
Keywords:Osteoporotic fracture  subsequent femoral fracture  multistate model  excess mortality  wild bootstrap
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