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Pre-injury use of antiplatelet and anticoagulations therapy are associated with increased mortality in a cohort of 1038 hip fracture patients
Institution:1. Department of Radiology, Shandong Provincial Corps Hospital of Chinese People''s Armed Police Force, Jinan 250014, China;2. Department of Ultrasonography, Shandong Provincial Qianfoshan Hospital, The First Hospital Affiliated to Shandong First Medical University, Jinan 250014, China;3. Department of Radiology, Affiliated Hospital of Binzhou Medical University, Binzhou 256600, China;1. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, E-Da Hospital, I-Shou University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan;2. Department of Physical Therapy, College of Medicine, National Cheng Kung University, Tainan, Taiwan;3. Department of Post-Baccalaureate Chinese Medicine, Tzu Chi University Hualien, Taiwan;1. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, South-1, West-16, Chuo-ku, Sapporo, 060-8543, Japan;2. Division of Occupational Therapy, Department of Rehabilitation, Japan Health Care College, Eniwa, Japan;1. Manufacturing and Automation Research Center, Koc University, Istanbul 34450, Turkey;2. Koc University, School of Medicine, Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, Istanbul 34365, Turkey
Abstract:BackgroundHip fractures are a large burden on the health care systems of developed nations. Patients usually have multiple co-morbidities and the pre-injury use of anticoagulants and anti-platelet medication is common.Materials and methodsThis study used a single hospital hip fracture database to facilitate a retrospective analysis of the impact of anti-coagulation and anti-platelet therapy on mortality and complications after surgical management of hip fractures. There were 92 patients on warfarin, 69 on DOAC, 260 antiplatelet patients and 617 control patients.ResultsMortality rates at 30 days were 4.8% for the control group, 12.6% for the antiplatelet group, warfarin 7.0%, 9.5% for Direct Oral Anticoagulant (DOAC) group, p = 0.004. Mortality rates at 1 year were 22.4% for the control group, 32.3% for the antiplatelet group, 29.3% for the warfarin group and 29.0% for DOAC group (p=0.007).Amongst complications, significant differences were found in transfusion (DOAC) and wound ooze (warfarin) rates, but the study did not detect significant clinical consequences arising from these differences.A matched analysis for age, sex, and ASA was undertaken to look in more detail at mortality data. Some mortality differences remained between groups with anti-platelet medication associated with increased mortality, but the differences no longer appeared to be significant.Our data suggests that this is a non-causal association, which could be incorporated into predictive mortality risk scores such as the Nottingham hip fracture score.ConclusionWe believe that pre-injury antiplatelet therapy is a strong indicator for high risk patients with higher expected mortality after hip fracture surgery. We saw no evidence to support delayed surgery in patients taking DOACs
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