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Impact of heart failure on hip fracture outcomes: A population‐based study

As the population ages, hip fractures and heart failure increase in prevalence.1, 2 Heart failure prevalence is also increasing in hospitalized patients.3 Indeed, hospitalizations involving heart failure as an active issue tripled in the last 30 years.4 Heart failure has been associated with an increased risk for hip fracture,5, 6 and previous studies report a 6%20% prevalence of preoperative heart failure in hip fracture patients.710 While exacerbation of heart failure increases the mortality risk in patients admitted for hip fractures,8 the incidence of new heart failure, as well as the preoperative factors that predict postoperative heart failure in this patient population remain unclear.

American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) perioperative guidelines identify orthopedic surgeries, including hip fracture repair, as intermediate risk procedures.11 Compared to other intermediate risk operations, however, postoperative outcomes following hip fracture repair differ significantly.1216 Overall mortality in hip fracture patients has been reported at 29% at one year,8 with the excess mortality from hip fracture alone at nearly 20%.10, 13 However, the exact factors that contribute to this excess mortality, particularly with regard to heart failure, remain unclear.

To examine the preoperative prevalence, subsequent incidence, and predictors of heart failure in patients undergoing hip fracture repair operations, this study used an established, population‐based database to compare the postoperative consequences in hip fracture repair patients with and without preexisting heart failure. We hypothesized that preoperative heart failure worsens postoperative outcomes in hip fracture patients.

METHODS

Case Ascertainment

Following approval by the Institutional Review Boards of Mayo Clinic and the Olmsted Medical Center, we used the Rochester Epidemiology Project (REP) to identify the patients for this study. The REP is a population‐based medical records linkage system that records all diagnoses, surgical procedures, laboratory data, and death information from hospital, emergency room, outpatient, and nursing home care in the community.17

All Olmsted County, Minnesota, residents who sustained a hip fracture and underwent surgical repair from 1988 through 2002 were evaluated. Patients with more than one hip fracture during the study period (96 occurrences) were censored from the data analysis at the time of the subsequent hip fracture and then included as new cases. The complete enumeration of hip fracture episodes managed in the three Olmsted County hospital facilities (Mayo Clinic's Saint Mary's and Rochester Methodist Hospitals, and the Olmsted Medical Center Hospital) occurred in three phases: First, all hospitalizations with the surgical procedure (International Statistical Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision [ICD‐9]) codes 79.15 (reduction, fracture, femur, closed with internal fixation), 79.25 (reduction, fracture, femur, open, without internal fixation), 79.35 (reduction, fracture, femur, open with internal fixation), 79.95 (operation, unspecified bone injury, femur), 80.05 (arthrotomy for removal of hip prosthesis), 80.15 (arthrotomy, other, hip), 80.95 (excision, hip joint), 81.21 (arthrodesis, hip), 81.40 (repair hip, not elsewhere classified), 81.51 (total hip replacement), 81.52 (partial hip replacement), and 81.53 (revision hip replacement) were identified. Second, through review of the original inpatient and outpatient medical records, we confirmed that a fracture was associated with the index hospitalization. Finally, radiology reports of each index hospitalization verified the presence and exact anatomical location of each fracture. Of those with fractures on admission x‐rays, only patients with a proximal femur (femoral neck or intertrochanteric) fracture as the primary indication for the surgery were included in the study. Surgical report or radiographic evidence of hip fracture was available for all patients. Secondary fractures due to a specific pathological lesion (eg, malignancy) or high‐energy trauma (by convention, motor vehicle accidents or falls from significant heights) were excluded. Only patients who had provided an authorization to review their medical records for research were ultimately included in the study cohort.18 Medical records were search manually, if indicated.

Criteria for Heart Failure and Death

Preoperative heart failure was based on clinical documentation of heart failure in a patient's medical record prior to the time of the hip fracture repair. Postoperative heart failure, including acute exacerbations, was defined according to Framingham criteria.19 Framingham criteria included clinical evidence of increased central venous pressure, pulmonary edema, an S3 gallop, radiographic pulmonary edema, and response to diuresis. Heart failure was not graded on clinical severity (ie, New York Heart Association classification). We did not distinguish between systolic and diastolic heart failure. Mortality was defined as death from any cause within the first year following hip fracture repair. Deaths were identified either through REP resources or the National Death Index.

Statistical Methods

Continuous variables are presented as mean standard deviation and categorical variables as number (percent). Two‐sample t tests or Wilcoxon rank sum tests were used to test for significant differences in continuous variables. Chi‐square or Fisher's exact tests were used for categorical variables. Rates of postoperative outcomes were calculated using the KaplanMeier method for the overall group and for those with and without preoperative heart failure. A landmark survival curve was used to evaluate postoperative mortality among patients who experienced heart failure in the first seven postoperative days versus those who did not. Patients who died or underwent another hip operation within the first seven postoperative days were excluded from this analysis. Univariate Cox proportional hazards models were used to evaluate the predictors of postoperative heart failure and mortality. Patients who died or experienced a second hip surgery within one year of their first were censored at that time. Any subsequent hip fracture repair was treated as a new case. To account for the inclusion of multiple hip fracture repairs for a given patient, the Cox proportional hazards model included a robust variance estimator. This provided an accurate calculation of the standard error in the presence of within‐subject correlation.20 Statistical tests were two‐sided, and P values were considered significant if less than 0.05. Statistical analyses were performed using SAS (version 9.1.3, SAS Institute, Cary, NC).

RESULTS

From among 1327 potential hip fracture repairs, we excluded 115 cases involving multiple injuries or operations (19), pathological fractures (20), in‐hospital fractures (3), or an operation >72 hours after the initial fracture (5). Three patients under 65 years of age were also excluded, as were cases with missing information (9) or cases managed nonoperatively (56). The final analysis included 1212 surgical cases in 1116 subjects. No subjects were lost to surveillance for 1 year following their hip fracture repair.

Table 1 summarizes the baseline characteristics of the study population. The overall prevalence of preoperative heart failure was 27.0% (327 of 1212). Those with preoperative heart failure were older, heavier, more likely male and white, and less likely to live independently preoperatively. They were also more likely to suffer from preexisting cardiovascular comorbidities.

Baseline Characteristics and Outcomes Among Olmsted County, Minnesota, Residents Undergoing Hip Fracture Repair, 19882002, by Preoperative Heart Failure Status
 All (N = 1,212)HF (N = 327)No HF (N = 885)P Value*
  • Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; HF, heart failure; SD, standard deviation.

  • P values for those with, vs without, preoperative heart failure (1Rank sum, 2Chi‐square, 3Fisher's exact).

  • BMI data were missing for 15 cases, preoperative ambulatory status was missing for 2 cases, and discharge disposition was missing for 1 case.

  • All values are N (%) unless otherwise noted.

  • Chronic renal insufficiency was defined as a creatinine >2.0 mg/dL.

Demographics    
Mean age (years) (SD)84.2 (7.44)85.5 (6.54)83.7 (7.70)0.00101
Male gender237 (19.6)76 (23.2)161 (18.2)0.04912
Mean BMI (kg/m2) (SD)23.3 (4.97)24.1 (5.68)23.0 (4.65)0.01231
White1,204 (99.3)322 (98.5)882 (99.7)0.03713
Preoperative living situation    
Nursing facility468 (38.6)144 (44)324 (36.6)0.01842
Home744 (61.4)183 (56)561 (63.4)0.05192
Preoperative ambulatory status    
Dependent149 (12.3)50 (15.3)99 (11.2) 
Independent1,061 (87.7)276 (84.7)785 (88.8) 
Medical history    
Hypertension705 (58.2)226 (69.1)479 (54.1)<0.00012
Diabetes mellitus143 (11.8)63 (19.3)80 (9)<0.00012
Cerebrovascular disease331 (27.3)129 (39.4)202 (22.8)<0.00012
Peripheral vascular disease195 (16.1)80 (24.5)115 (13)<0.00012
Coronary artery disease464 (38.3)237 (72.5)227 (25.6)<0.00012
Atrial fibrillation/flutter254 (21)133 (40.7)121 (13.7)<0.00012
Complete heart block18 (1.5)9 (2.8)9 (1)0.03373
Pacer at time of admission32 (2.6)16 (4.9)16 (1.8)0.00292
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease196 (16.2)78 (23.9)118 (13.3)<0.00012
Liver disease15 (1.2)7 (2.1)8 (0.9)0.13753
Chronic renal insufficiency131 (10.8)61 (18.7)70 (7.9)<0.00012
Mean length of hospitalization (days) (SD)10.0 (7.57)11.1 (8.82)9.6 (7.01)0.00101
Discharge disposition   0.00192
Home150 (12.4)26 (8.0)124 (14.0) 
Skilled nursing facility1,004 (82.9)278 (85.0)726 (82.1) 
Dead57 (4.7)23 (7.0)34 (3.9) 

Table 1 also summarizes the main outcome characteristics of the study population. Those with preoperative heart failure had longer mean lengths of stay (LOS), were more often discharged to a skilled facility, and demonstrated higher inpatient mortality rates.

Table 2 summarizes the outcomes associated with preoperative heart failure. The overall rate of postoperative heart failure was 6.7% within 7 postoperative days and 21.3% within 1 postoperative year. Postoperative heart failure was significantly more common among those with preoperative heart failure (hazard ratio [HR], 3.0; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.3 to 3.9; P < 0.001). Among those without preoperative heart failure, rates of postoperative incident heart failure were 4.8% at 7 days and 15.0% at 1 year. Compared to patients without preoperative heart failure, those with preoperative heart failure demonstrated higher one year mortality rates and higher rates of postoperative heart failure at 7 days and 1 year.

Association of Preoperative Heart Failure With Postoperative Outcomes Among Olmsted County, Minnesota, Residents Undergoing Hip Fracture Repair, 19882002
 Preoperative Heart Failure (Subjects)
OutcomeAll (N = 1212)No (N = 885)Yes (N = 327)Risk ratio* (95% CI)P Value
  • Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval.

  • Risk ratio for those with vs without preoperative heart failure. Odds ratios were calculated using logistic regression for the outcome of heart failure exacerbation within seven postoperative days; hazard ratios were calculated using Cox proportional hazards models for each of the one‐year outcomes.

  • Excluded 26 cases in which a patient died in hospital without postoperative heart failure.

  • One‐year rates were estimated using the KaplanMeier method.

Heart failure exacerbation within seven postoperative days6.7% (5.4, 8.3)4.8% (3.5, 6.5)12.1% (8.7, 16.2)2.72 (1.72, 4.31)<0.0001
One‐year postoperative heart failure exacerbation21.3% (18.8, 23.7)15.0% (12.5, 17.4)39.3% (33.3, 44.9)3.00 (2.32, 3.87)<0.0001
One‐year postoperative mortality24.5% (22.0, 26.9)19.8% (17.1, 22.4)37.2% (31.6, 42.3)2.11 (1.67, 2.67)<0.0001
One‐year postoperative mortality or heart failure exacerbation36.5% (33.7, 39.2)29.7% (26.6, 32.6)55.0% (49.3, 60.2)2.28 (1.88, 2.76)<0.0001

Figure 1 displays the outcomes to 1 year of surveillance. Rates of postoperative heart failure and postoperative mortality were consistently higher among those with, versus without, preoperative heart failure. Figure 2 displays similar data stratified by gender. Postoperative heart failure rates did not differ significantly between genders (HR, 1.0; 95% CI, 0.8 to 1.4), but postoperative mortality rates were significantly higher among males than females (HR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.5 to 2.5; P < 0.001).

Figure 1
Cumulative incidence of postoperative outcomes among Olmsted County, Minnesota, residents undergoing hip fracture repair, 1988–2002, by preoperative heart failure status. Abbreviations: HF, heart failure.
Figure 2
Cumulative incidence of postoperative outcomes among Olmsted County, Minnesota, residents undergoing hip fracture repair, 1988–2002, by gender. Abbreviations: HF, heart failure.

Figure 3 displays survival rates to 1 year based on the occurrence of incident or recurrent heart failure within the first 7 postoperative days. Survival rates were lowest among patients with recurrent heart failure in the first 7 postoperative days and highest among those with no preoperative or postoperative heart failure. Subjects with incident heart failure in the first postoperative week, and those with preoperative heart failure who did not suffer a recurrence, demonstrated intermediate survival rates (P < 0.001 for trend across all four groups).

Figure 3
Landmark survival curve to outcome of survival, by heart failure status; excluded 30 records where the patient died or underwent a second surgery before postoperative day 7. Abbreviations: HF, heart failure.

DISCUSSION

This population‐based study found that heart failure represents a highly prevalent condition in elderly patients undergoing hip fracture repairs. It demonstrates that those with preoperative heart failure typically suffer from more cardiovascular comorbidities and carry a higher risk of postoperative heart failure and postoperative mortality.

While many studies have focused on the epidemiology of hip fractures,21 population‐based data on cardiac complications following hip fracture repair are significantly less common. The ACC/AHA preoperative cardiac evaluation guidelines classify orthopedic procedures, including hip fracture repair, as intermediate risk.11 Consequently, some may assume that all orthopedic patients will have a mortality rate less than 5%. Indeed, the 30‐day postoperative mortality rate published from our institution's Total Joint Registry was 0.6% following elective total hip arthroplasty.22 However, the present study demonstrates that current ACC/AHA preoperative cardiac evaluation guidelines may not apply to the population of frail patients undergoing hip fracture repair. Particularly among those who experience new heart failure within the first seven days following surgery, outcomes are substantially worse than the ACC/AHA perioperative guidelines may suggest.11

Preoperative heart failure has been associated with adverse risk for postoperative mortality after hip fracture.9, 10, 12 However, these studies did not report heart failure as a complication of hip fracture repair. A prospective cohort study of 2448 hip fracture patients at an academic hospital in Great Britain found a 5% rate of inpatient heart failure as a postoperative complication.23 The hazard ratio for one‐year mortality was 11.3 with postoperative heart failure.23 However, the British study did not distinguish heart failure from other cardiovascular diseases as a preoperative comorbidity or stratify the risk for postoperative mortality by preoperative heart failure status.23 Our findings add to previous literature by measuring heart failure as a specific complication of hip fracture repair and examining the association of preoperative heart failure with postoperative heart failure and mortality.

Length of stay after hip fracture repair varies in the literature, but previous work has not clearly associated heart failure with length of hospitalization in the setting of hip fracture repair.24, 25 Our study found a significantly higher mean length of stay among those with preoperative heart failure. This adds to previous work by delineating an association between heart failure and increased length of stay after hip fracture repair.

We found a higher rate of postoperative mortality among men compared to women. Rates of postoperative heart failure, however, were more similar (Figure 2). Previous studies have found a consistently higher mortality rate among men versus women after hip fracture.9, 23, 2529 Possible explanations for these findings include the overall increased burden of cardiovascular disease among men, lower treatment rates of osteoporosis in men,30 and increased susceptibility to other postoperative complications, such as infection.25

The findings of this study carry important clinical implications for the perioperative care of hip fracture patients with, or at risk for, heart failure. They suggest that current risk stratification guidelines classifying orthopedic operations as intermediate risk procedures do not reflect the high risk for morbidity that hip fracture patients face.11 The association of heart failure with adverse outcomes implies the need for heightened surveillance in the perioperative period, particularly with regard to volume status and medication reconciliation. Hip fracture patients and their families must be counseled about the ramifications of perioperative heart failure, including higher rates of postoperative heart failure, longer hospitalizations, and ultimate mortality.

This research carries several limitations and remains subject to biases inherent in retrospective cohort studies. The reported effects of heart failure on outcomes after hip fracture repair may be due to confounding from age, functional status, and other comorbidities. We attempted to minimize sampling bias through complete enumeration of hip fracture surgeries among Olmsted County residents. Completeness of follow‐up (100% at one year) was possible given the availability of documentation of all inpatient and outpatient medical care in the community.17 We used objectively defined outcomes to minimize measurement bias. Applicability to a more diverse population may be limited because >95% of the research population was from a single, predominantly white community. However, prior studies have documented that hip fracture incidence rates31 and socioeconomic factors17 in Olmsted County are similar to those for other white residents of the United States. Heart failure rates were determined clinically according to the Framingham criteria. However, the Framingham criteria may inappropriately diagnose individuals with heart failure32 and falsely elevate the prevalence of heart failure as a preoperative comorbidity or postoperative complication.

The statistical analysis included patients counted multiple times if they underwent subsequent hip fracture repair during the study period. Including these patients may inaccurately inflate event rates or contribute to incorrect estimates of standard error. However, we felt it was appropriate to include recurrent hip fracture repair cases in the analysis because they represent a clinically distinct patient from both a medical and functional perspective. We used a robust variance estimator in the Cox proportional hazards models to provide an accurate calculation of the standard error given the possibility for correlation within subjects.20 Finally, the proportion of these patients was low (94 of 1116 unique patients; 8.4%).

Future work must involve further risk stratification and therapeutic interventions in perioperative hip fracture patients. A more robust analysis of heart failure, with differentiation between systolic and diastolic dysfunction, may facilitate risk stratification. Assessment of compliance with standard preoperative heart failure medications and the impact of heightened clinical vigilance may enlighten means to improve postoperative outcomes. Studies on risk stratification and therapeutic interventions may then inform policy regarding length of stay and reimbursement in hip fracture patients.

CONCLUSION

In summary, our population‐based findings reveal that heart failure represents a prevalent and serious comorbidity in patients undergoing hip fracture repair. Clinicians caring for perioperative hip fracture patients must pay particular attention to risk for, and implications of, new or recurrent heart failure.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Donna K. Lawson, LPN, Kathy Wolfert, and Cherie Dolliver for their assistance in data collection and management.

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References
  1. Melton LJ.Epidemiology of hip fractures: Implications of the exponential increase with age.Bone.1996;18(3 suppl):121S125S.
  2. Bueno H,Ross JS,Wang Y, et al.Trends in length of stay and short‐term outcomes among Medicare patients hospitalized for heart failure, 1993–2006.JAMA.2010;303(21):21412147.
  3. Koelling TM,Chen RS,Lubwama RN,L'Italien GJ,Eagle KA.The expanding national burden of heart failure in the United States: The influence of heart failure in women.Am Heart J.2004;147(1):7478.
  4. Fang J,Mensah GA,Croft JB,Keenan NL.Heart failure‐related hospitalization in the U.S., 1979 to 2004.J Am Coll Cardiol.2008;52(6):428434.
  5. van Diepen S,Majumdar SR,Bakal JA,McAlister FA,Ezekowitz JA.Heart failure is a risk factor for orthopedic fracture: A population‐based analysis of 16,294 patients.Circulation.2008;118(19):19461952.
  6. Sennerby U,Melhus H,Gedeborg R, et al.Cardiovascular diseases and risk of hip fracture.JAMA.2009;302(15):16661673.
  7. Nigwekar SU,Job AV,Kouides RW,Polashenski W.Effectiveness of hospitalist involvement in hip fracture management questioned.South Med J.2007;100(9):912913.
  8. Batsis JA,Phy MP,Melton LJ, et al.Effects of a hospitalist care model on mortality of elderly patients with hip fractures.J Hosp Med.2007;2(4):219225.
  9. Kannegaard PN,van der Mark S,Eiken P,Abrahamsen B.Excess mortality in men compared with women following a hip fracture. National analysis of comedications, comorbidity and survival.Age Ageing.2010;39(2):203209.
  10. Vestergaard P,Rejnmark L,Mosekilde L.Increased mortality in patients with a hip fracture—Effect of pre‐morbid conditions and post‐fracture complications.Osteoporos Int.2007;18(12):15831593.
  11. Fleisher LA,Beckman JA,Brown KA, et al.ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines on perioperative cardiovascular evaluation and care for noncardiac surgery: Executive summary: A report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines (Writing Committee to Revise the 2002 Guidelines on Perioperative Cardiovascular Evaluation for Noncardiac Surgery): Developed in collaboration with the American Society of Echocardiography, American Society of Nuclear Cardiology, Heart Rhythm Society, Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists, Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, Society for Vascular Medicine and Biology, and Society for Vascular Surgery.J Am Coll Cardiol.2007;50(17):17071732.
  12. Tosteson ANA,Gottlieb DJ,Radley DC,Fisher ES,Melton LJ.Excess mortality following hip fracture: The role of underlying health status.Osteoporos Int.2007;18(11):14631472.
  13. Giversen IM.Time trends of mortality after first hip fractures.Osteoporos Int.2007;18(6):721732.
  14. Hannan EL,Magaziner J,Wang JJ, et al.Mortality and locomotion 6 months after hospitalization for hip fracture: Risk factors and risk‐adjusted hospital outcomes.JAMA.2001;285(21):27362742.
  15. Meyer HE,Tverdal A,Falch JA,Pedersen JI.Factors associated with mortality after hip fracture.Osteoporos Int.2000;11(3):228232.
  16. Myers AH,Robinson EG,Natta MLV,Michelson JD,Collins K,Baker SP.Hip fractures among the elderly: Factors associated with in‐hospital mortality.Am J Epidemiol.1991;134(10):11281137.
  17. Melton LJ.History of the Rochester Epidemiology Project.Mayo Clin Proc.1996;71(3):266274.
  18. Melton LJ.The threat to medical‐records research.N Engl J Med.1997;337(20):14661470.
  19. McKee PA,Castelli WP,McNamara PM,Kannel WB.The natural history of congestive heart failure: The Framingham Study.N Engl J Med.1971;285(26):14411446.
  20. Lin DY,Wei LJ.The robust inference for the Cox proportional hazards model.J Am Stat Assoc.1989;84(408):10741078.
  21. Marks R.Hip fracture epidemiological trends, outcomes, and risk factors, 1970–2009.Int J Gen Med.2010;3:117.
  22. Wood M,Mantilla CB,Horlocker TT,Schroeder DR,Berry DJ,Brown DL.Frequency of myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism, deep venous thrombosis, and death following primary hip or knee arthroplasty.Anesthesiology.2002;96(5):11401146.
  23. Roche JJW,Wenn RT,Sahota O,Moran CG.Effect of comorbidities and postoperative complications on mortality after hip fracture in elderly people: Prospective observational cohort study.BMJ.2005;331(7529):13741376.
  24. Bentler SE,Liu L,Obrizan M, et al.The aftermath of hip fracture: Discharge placement, functional status change, and mortality.Am J Epidemiol.2009;170(10):12901299.
  25. Wehren LE,Hawkes WG,Orwig DL,Hebel JR,Zimmerman SI,Magaziner J.Gender differences in mortality after hip fracture: The role of infection.J Bone Miner Res.2003;18(12):22312237.
  26. Center JR,Nguyen TV,Schneider D,Sambrook PN,Eisman JA.Mortality after all major types of osteoporotic fracture in men and women: An observational study.Lancet.1999;353(9156):878882.
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heart failure, postoperative evaluation and care, cardiovascular risk assessment
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As the population ages, hip fractures and heart failure increase in prevalence.1, 2 Heart failure prevalence is also increasing in hospitalized patients.3 Indeed, hospitalizations involving heart failure as an active issue tripled in the last 30 years.4 Heart failure has been associated with an increased risk for hip fracture,5, 6 and previous studies report a 6%20% prevalence of preoperative heart failure in hip fracture patients.710 While exacerbation of heart failure increases the mortality risk in patients admitted for hip fractures,8 the incidence of new heart failure, as well as the preoperative factors that predict postoperative heart failure in this patient population remain unclear.

American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) perioperative guidelines identify orthopedic surgeries, including hip fracture repair, as intermediate risk procedures.11 Compared to other intermediate risk operations, however, postoperative outcomes following hip fracture repair differ significantly.1216 Overall mortality in hip fracture patients has been reported at 29% at one year,8 with the excess mortality from hip fracture alone at nearly 20%.10, 13 However, the exact factors that contribute to this excess mortality, particularly with regard to heart failure, remain unclear.

To examine the preoperative prevalence, subsequent incidence, and predictors of heart failure in patients undergoing hip fracture repair operations, this study used an established, population‐based database to compare the postoperative consequences in hip fracture repair patients with and without preexisting heart failure. We hypothesized that preoperative heart failure worsens postoperative outcomes in hip fracture patients.

METHODS

Case Ascertainment

Following approval by the Institutional Review Boards of Mayo Clinic and the Olmsted Medical Center, we used the Rochester Epidemiology Project (REP) to identify the patients for this study. The REP is a population‐based medical records linkage system that records all diagnoses, surgical procedures, laboratory data, and death information from hospital, emergency room, outpatient, and nursing home care in the community.17

All Olmsted County, Minnesota, residents who sustained a hip fracture and underwent surgical repair from 1988 through 2002 were evaluated. Patients with more than one hip fracture during the study period (96 occurrences) were censored from the data analysis at the time of the subsequent hip fracture and then included as new cases. The complete enumeration of hip fracture episodes managed in the three Olmsted County hospital facilities (Mayo Clinic's Saint Mary's and Rochester Methodist Hospitals, and the Olmsted Medical Center Hospital) occurred in three phases: First, all hospitalizations with the surgical procedure (International Statistical Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision [ICD‐9]) codes 79.15 (reduction, fracture, femur, closed with internal fixation), 79.25 (reduction, fracture, femur, open, without internal fixation), 79.35 (reduction, fracture, femur, open with internal fixation), 79.95 (operation, unspecified bone injury, femur), 80.05 (arthrotomy for removal of hip prosthesis), 80.15 (arthrotomy, other, hip), 80.95 (excision, hip joint), 81.21 (arthrodesis, hip), 81.40 (repair hip, not elsewhere classified), 81.51 (total hip replacement), 81.52 (partial hip replacement), and 81.53 (revision hip replacement) were identified. Second, through review of the original inpatient and outpatient medical records, we confirmed that a fracture was associated with the index hospitalization. Finally, radiology reports of each index hospitalization verified the presence and exact anatomical location of each fracture. Of those with fractures on admission x‐rays, only patients with a proximal femur (femoral neck or intertrochanteric) fracture as the primary indication for the surgery were included in the study. Surgical report or radiographic evidence of hip fracture was available for all patients. Secondary fractures due to a specific pathological lesion (eg, malignancy) or high‐energy trauma (by convention, motor vehicle accidents or falls from significant heights) were excluded. Only patients who had provided an authorization to review their medical records for research were ultimately included in the study cohort.18 Medical records were search manually, if indicated.

Criteria for Heart Failure and Death

Preoperative heart failure was based on clinical documentation of heart failure in a patient's medical record prior to the time of the hip fracture repair. Postoperative heart failure, including acute exacerbations, was defined according to Framingham criteria.19 Framingham criteria included clinical evidence of increased central venous pressure, pulmonary edema, an S3 gallop, radiographic pulmonary edema, and response to diuresis. Heart failure was not graded on clinical severity (ie, New York Heart Association classification). We did not distinguish between systolic and diastolic heart failure. Mortality was defined as death from any cause within the first year following hip fracture repair. Deaths were identified either through REP resources or the National Death Index.

Statistical Methods

Continuous variables are presented as mean standard deviation and categorical variables as number (percent). Two‐sample t tests or Wilcoxon rank sum tests were used to test for significant differences in continuous variables. Chi‐square or Fisher's exact tests were used for categorical variables. Rates of postoperative outcomes were calculated using the KaplanMeier method for the overall group and for those with and without preoperative heart failure. A landmark survival curve was used to evaluate postoperative mortality among patients who experienced heart failure in the first seven postoperative days versus those who did not. Patients who died or underwent another hip operation within the first seven postoperative days were excluded from this analysis. Univariate Cox proportional hazards models were used to evaluate the predictors of postoperative heart failure and mortality. Patients who died or experienced a second hip surgery within one year of their first were censored at that time. Any subsequent hip fracture repair was treated as a new case. To account for the inclusion of multiple hip fracture repairs for a given patient, the Cox proportional hazards model included a robust variance estimator. This provided an accurate calculation of the standard error in the presence of within‐subject correlation.20 Statistical tests were two‐sided, and P values were considered significant if less than 0.05. Statistical analyses were performed using SAS (version 9.1.3, SAS Institute, Cary, NC).

RESULTS

From among 1327 potential hip fracture repairs, we excluded 115 cases involving multiple injuries or operations (19), pathological fractures (20), in‐hospital fractures (3), or an operation >72 hours after the initial fracture (5). Three patients under 65 years of age were also excluded, as were cases with missing information (9) or cases managed nonoperatively (56). The final analysis included 1212 surgical cases in 1116 subjects. No subjects were lost to surveillance for 1 year following their hip fracture repair.

Table 1 summarizes the baseline characteristics of the study population. The overall prevalence of preoperative heart failure was 27.0% (327 of 1212). Those with preoperative heart failure were older, heavier, more likely male and white, and less likely to live independently preoperatively. They were also more likely to suffer from preexisting cardiovascular comorbidities.

Baseline Characteristics and Outcomes Among Olmsted County, Minnesota, Residents Undergoing Hip Fracture Repair, 19882002, by Preoperative Heart Failure Status
 All (N = 1,212)HF (N = 327)No HF (N = 885)P Value*
  • Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; HF, heart failure; SD, standard deviation.

  • P values for those with, vs without, preoperative heart failure (1Rank sum, 2Chi‐square, 3Fisher's exact).

  • BMI data were missing for 15 cases, preoperative ambulatory status was missing for 2 cases, and discharge disposition was missing for 1 case.

  • All values are N (%) unless otherwise noted.

  • Chronic renal insufficiency was defined as a creatinine >2.0 mg/dL.

Demographics    
Mean age (years) (SD)84.2 (7.44)85.5 (6.54)83.7 (7.70)0.00101
Male gender237 (19.6)76 (23.2)161 (18.2)0.04912
Mean BMI (kg/m2) (SD)23.3 (4.97)24.1 (5.68)23.0 (4.65)0.01231
White1,204 (99.3)322 (98.5)882 (99.7)0.03713
Preoperative living situation    
Nursing facility468 (38.6)144 (44)324 (36.6)0.01842
Home744 (61.4)183 (56)561 (63.4)0.05192
Preoperative ambulatory status    
Dependent149 (12.3)50 (15.3)99 (11.2) 
Independent1,061 (87.7)276 (84.7)785 (88.8) 
Medical history    
Hypertension705 (58.2)226 (69.1)479 (54.1)<0.00012
Diabetes mellitus143 (11.8)63 (19.3)80 (9)<0.00012
Cerebrovascular disease331 (27.3)129 (39.4)202 (22.8)<0.00012
Peripheral vascular disease195 (16.1)80 (24.5)115 (13)<0.00012
Coronary artery disease464 (38.3)237 (72.5)227 (25.6)<0.00012
Atrial fibrillation/flutter254 (21)133 (40.7)121 (13.7)<0.00012
Complete heart block18 (1.5)9 (2.8)9 (1)0.03373
Pacer at time of admission32 (2.6)16 (4.9)16 (1.8)0.00292
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease196 (16.2)78 (23.9)118 (13.3)<0.00012
Liver disease15 (1.2)7 (2.1)8 (0.9)0.13753
Chronic renal insufficiency131 (10.8)61 (18.7)70 (7.9)<0.00012
Mean length of hospitalization (days) (SD)10.0 (7.57)11.1 (8.82)9.6 (7.01)0.00101
Discharge disposition   0.00192
Home150 (12.4)26 (8.0)124 (14.0) 
Skilled nursing facility1,004 (82.9)278 (85.0)726 (82.1) 
Dead57 (4.7)23 (7.0)34 (3.9) 

Table 1 also summarizes the main outcome characteristics of the study population. Those with preoperative heart failure had longer mean lengths of stay (LOS), were more often discharged to a skilled facility, and demonstrated higher inpatient mortality rates.

Table 2 summarizes the outcomes associated with preoperative heart failure. The overall rate of postoperative heart failure was 6.7% within 7 postoperative days and 21.3% within 1 postoperative year. Postoperative heart failure was significantly more common among those with preoperative heart failure (hazard ratio [HR], 3.0; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.3 to 3.9; P < 0.001). Among those without preoperative heart failure, rates of postoperative incident heart failure were 4.8% at 7 days and 15.0% at 1 year. Compared to patients without preoperative heart failure, those with preoperative heart failure demonstrated higher one year mortality rates and higher rates of postoperative heart failure at 7 days and 1 year.

Association of Preoperative Heart Failure With Postoperative Outcomes Among Olmsted County, Minnesota, Residents Undergoing Hip Fracture Repair, 19882002
 Preoperative Heart Failure (Subjects)
OutcomeAll (N = 1212)No (N = 885)Yes (N = 327)Risk ratio* (95% CI)P Value
  • Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval.

  • Risk ratio for those with vs without preoperative heart failure. Odds ratios were calculated using logistic regression for the outcome of heart failure exacerbation within seven postoperative days; hazard ratios were calculated using Cox proportional hazards models for each of the one‐year outcomes.

  • Excluded 26 cases in which a patient died in hospital without postoperative heart failure.

  • One‐year rates were estimated using the KaplanMeier method.

Heart failure exacerbation within seven postoperative days6.7% (5.4, 8.3)4.8% (3.5, 6.5)12.1% (8.7, 16.2)2.72 (1.72, 4.31)<0.0001
One‐year postoperative heart failure exacerbation21.3% (18.8, 23.7)15.0% (12.5, 17.4)39.3% (33.3, 44.9)3.00 (2.32, 3.87)<0.0001
One‐year postoperative mortality24.5% (22.0, 26.9)19.8% (17.1, 22.4)37.2% (31.6, 42.3)2.11 (1.67, 2.67)<0.0001
One‐year postoperative mortality or heart failure exacerbation36.5% (33.7, 39.2)29.7% (26.6, 32.6)55.0% (49.3, 60.2)2.28 (1.88, 2.76)<0.0001

Figure 1 displays the outcomes to 1 year of surveillance. Rates of postoperative heart failure and postoperative mortality were consistently higher among those with, versus without, preoperative heart failure. Figure 2 displays similar data stratified by gender. Postoperative heart failure rates did not differ significantly between genders (HR, 1.0; 95% CI, 0.8 to 1.4), but postoperative mortality rates were significantly higher among males than females (HR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.5 to 2.5; P < 0.001).

Figure 1
Cumulative incidence of postoperative outcomes among Olmsted County, Minnesota, residents undergoing hip fracture repair, 1988–2002, by preoperative heart failure status. Abbreviations: HF, heart failure.
Figure 2
Cumulative incidence of postoperative outcomes among Olmsted County, Minnesota, residents undergoing hip fracture repair, 1988–2002, by gender. Abbreviations: HF, heart failure.

Figure 3 displays survival rates to 1 year based on the occurrence of incident or recurrent heart failure within the first 7 postoperative days. Survival rates were lowest among patients with recurrent heart failure in the first 7 postoperative days and highest among those with no preoperative or postoperative heart failure. Subjects with incident heart failure in the first postoperative week, and those with preoperative heart failure who did not suffer a recurrence, demonstrated intermediate survival rates (P < 0.001 for trend across all four groups).

Figure 3
Landmark survival curve to outcome of survival, by heart failure status; excluded 30 records where the patient died or underwent a second surgery before postoperative day 7. Abbreviations: HF, heart failure.

DISCUSSION

This population‐based study found that heart failure represents a highly prevalent condition in elderly patients undergoing hip fracture repairs. It demonstrates that those with preoperative heart failure typically suffer from more cardiovascular comorbidities and carry a higher risk of postoperative heart failure and postoperative mortality.

While many studies have focused on the epidemiology of hip fractures,21 population‐based data on cardiac complications following hip fracture repair are significantly less common. The ACC/AHA preoperative cardiac evaluation guidelines classify orthopedic procedures, including hip fracture repair, as intermediate risk.11 Consequently, some may assume that all orthopedic patients will have a mortality rate less than 5%. Indeed, the 30‐day postoperative mortality rate published from our institution's Total Joint Registry was 0.6% following elective total hip arthroplasty.22 However, the present study demonstrates that current ACC/AHA preoperative cardiac evaluation guidelines may not apply to the population of frail patients undergoing hip fracture repair. Particularly among those who experience new heart failure within the first seven days following surgery, outcomes are substantially worse than the ACC/AHA perioperative guidelines may suggest.11

Preoperative heart failure has been associated with adverse risk for postoperative mortality after hip fracture.9, 10, 12 However, these studies did not report heart failure as a complication of hip fracture repair. A prospective cohort study of 2448 hip fracture patients at an academic hospital in Great Britain found a 5% rate of inpatient heart failure as a postoperative complication.23 The hazard ratio for one‐year mortality was 11.3 with postoperative heart failure.23 However, the British study did not distinguish heart failure from other cardiovascular diseases as a preoperative comorbidity or stratify the risk for postoperative mortality by preoperative heart failure status.23 Our findings add to previous literature by measuring heart failure as a specific complication of hip fracture repair and examining the association of preoperative heart failure with postoperative heart failure and mortality.

Length of stay after hip fracture repair varies in the literature, but previous work has not clearly associated heart failure with length of hospitalization in the setting of hip fracture repair.24, 25 Our study found a significantly higher mean length of stay among those with preoperative heart failure. This adds to previous work by delineating an association between heart failure and increased length of stay after hip fracture repair.

We found a higher rate of postoperative mortality among men compared to women. Rates of postoperative heart failure, however, were more similar (Figure 2). Previous studies have found a consistently higher mortality rate among men versus women after hip fracture.9, 23, 2529 Possible explanations for these findings include the overall increased burden of cardiovascular disease among men, lower treatment rates of osteoporosis in men,30 and increased susceptibility to other postoperative complications, such as infection.25

The findings of this study carry important clinical implications for the perioperative care of hip fracture patients with, or at risk for, heart failure. They suggest that current risk stratification guidelines classifying orthopedic operations as intermediate risk procedures do not reflect the high risk for morbidity that hip fracture patients face.11 The association of heart failure with adverse outcomes implies the need for heightened surveillance in the perioperative period, particularly with regard to volume status and medication reconciliation. Hip fracture patients and their families must be counseled about the ramifications of perioperative heart failure, including higher rates of postoperative heart failure, longer hospitalizations, and ultimate mortality.

This research carries several limitations and remains subject to biases inherent in retrospective cohort studies. The reported effects of heart failure on outcomes after hip fracture repair may be due to confounding from age, functional status, and other comorbidities. We attempted to minimize sampling bias through complete enumeration of hip fracture surgeries among Olmsted County residents. Completeness of follow‐up (100% at one year) was possible given the availability of documentation of all inpatient and outpatient medical care in the community.17 We used objectively defined outcomes to minimize measurement bias. Applicability to a more diverse population may be limited because >95% of the research population was from a single, predominantly white community. However, prior studies have documented that hip fracture incidence rates31 and socioeconomic factors17 in Olmsted County are similar to those for other white residents of the United States. Heart failure rates were determined clinically according to the Framingham criteria. However, the Framingham criteria may inappropriately diagnose individuals with heart failure32 and falsely elevate the prevalence of heart failure as a preoperative comorbidity or postoperative complication.

The statistical analysis included patients counted multiple times if they underwent subsequent hip fracture repair during the study period. Including these patients may inaccurately inflate event rates or contribute to incorrect estimates of standard error. However, we felt it was appropriate to include recurrent hip fracture repair cases in the analysis because they represent a clinically distinct patient from both a medical and functional perspective. We used a robust variance estimator in the Cox proportional hazards models to provide an accurate calculation of the standard error given the possibility for correlation within subjects.20 Finally, the proportion of these patients was low (94 of 1116 unique patients; 8.4%).

Future work must involve further risk stratification and therapeutic interventions in perioperative hip fracture patients. A more robust analysis of heart failure, with differentiation between systolic and diastolic dysfunction, may facilitate risk stratification. Assessment of compliance with standard preoperative heart failure medications and the impact of heightened clinical vigilance may enlighten means to improve postoperative outcomes. Studies on risk stratification and therapeutic interventions may then inform policy regarding length of stay and reimbursement in hip fracture patients.

CONCLUSION

In summary, our population‐based findings reveal that heart failure represents a prevalent and serious comorbidity in patients undergoing hip fracture repair. Clinicians caring for perioperative hip fracture patients must pay particular attention to risk for, and implications of, new or recurrent heart failure.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Donna K. Lawson, LPN, Kathy Wolfert, and Cherie Dolliver for their assistance in data collection and management.

As the population ages, hip fractures and heart failure increase in prevalence.1, 2 Heart failure prevalence is also increasing in hospitalized patients.3 Indeed, hospitalizations involving heart failure as an active issue tripled in the last 30 years.4 Heart failure has been associated with an increased risk for hip fracture,5, 6 and previous studies report a 6%20% prevalence of preoperative heart failure in hip fracture patients.710 While exacerbation of heart failure increases the mortality risk in patients admitted for hip fractures,8 the incidence of new heart failure, as well as the preoperative factors that predict postoperative heart failure in this patient population remain unclear.

American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) perioperative guidelines identify orthopedic surgeries, including hip fracture repair, as intermediate risk procedures.11 Compared to other intermediate risk operations, however, postoperative outcomes following hip fracture repair differ significantly.1216 Overall mortality in hip fracture patients has been reported at 29% at one year,8 with the excess mortality from hip fracture alone at nearly 20%.10, 13 However, the exact factors that contribute to this excess mortality, particularly with regard to heart failure, remain unclear.

To examine the preoperative prevalence, subsequent incidence, and predictors of heart failure in patients undergoing hip fracture repair operations, this study used an established, population‐based database to compare the postoperative consequences in hip fracture repair patients with and without preexisting heart failure. We hypothesized that preoperative heart failure worsens postoperative outcomes in hip fracture patients.

METHODS

Case Ascertainment

Following approval by the Institutional Review Boards of Mayo Clinic and the Olmsted Medical Center, we used the Rochester Epidemiology Project (REP) to identify the patients for this study. The REP is a population‐based medical records linkage system that records all diagnoses, surgical procedures, laboratory data, and death information from hospital, emergency room, outpatient, and nursing home care in the community.17

All Olmsted County, Minnesota, residents who sustained a hip fracture and underwent surgical repair from 1988 through 2002 were evaluated. Patients with more than one hip fracture during the study period (96 occurrences) were censored from the data analysis at the time of the subsequent hip fracture and then included as new cases. The complete enumeration of hip fracture episodes managed in the three Olmsted County hospital facilities (Mayo Clinic's Saint Mary's and Rochester Methodist Hospitals, and the Olmsted Medical Center Hospital) occurred in three phases: First, all hospitalizations with the surgical procedure (International Statistical Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision [ICD‐9]) codes 79.15 (reduction, fracture, femur, closed with internal fixation), 79.25 (reduction, fracture, femur, open, without internal fixation), 79.35 (reduction, fracture, femur, open with internal fixation), 79.95 (operation, unspecified bone injury, femur), 80.05 (arthrotomy for removal of hip prosthesis), 80.15 (arthrotomy, other, hip), 80.95 (excision, hip joint), 81.21 (arthrodesis, hip), 81.40 (repair hip, not elsewhere classified), 81.51 (total hip replacement), 81.52 (partial hip replacement), and 81.53 (revision hip replacement) were identified. Second, through review of the original inpatient and outpatient medical records, we confirmed that a fracture was associated with the index hospitalization. Finally, radiology reports of each index hospitalization verified the presence and exact anatomical location of each fracture. Of those with fractures on admission x‐rays, only patients with a proximal femur (femoral neck or intertrochanteric) fracture as the primary indication for the surgery were included in the study. Surgical report or radiographic evidence of hip fracture was available for all patients. Secondary fractures due to a specific pathological lesion (eg, malignancy) or high‐energy trauma (by convention, motor vehicle accidents or falls from significant heights) were excluded. Only patients who had provided an authorization to review their medical records for research were ultimately included in the study cohort.18 Medical records were search manually, if indicated.

Criteria for Heart Failure and Death

Preoperative heart failure was based on clinical documentation of heart failure in a patient's medical record prior to the time of the hip fracture repair. Postoperative heart failure, including acute exacerbations, was defined according to Framingham criteria.19 Framingham criteria included clinical evidence of increased central venous pressure, pulmonary edema, an S3 gallop, radiographic pulmonary edema, and response to diuresis. Heart failure was not graded on clinical severity (ie, New York Heart Association classification). We did not distinguish between systolic and diastolic heart failure. Mortality was defined as death from any cause within the first year following hip fracture repair. Deaths were identified either through REP resources or the National Death Index.

Statistical Methods

Continuous variables are presented as mean standard deviation and categorical variables as number (percent). Two‐sample t tests or Wilcoxon rank sum tests were used to test for significant differences in continuous variables. Chi‐square or Fisher's exact tests were used for categorical variables. Rates of postoperative outcomes were calculated using the KaplanMeier method for the overall group and for those with and without preoperative heart failure. A landmark survival curve was used to evaluate postoperative mortality among patients who experienced heart failure in the first seven postoperative days versus those who did not. Patients who died or underwent another hip operation within the first seven postoperative days were excluded from this analysis. Univariate Cox proportional hazards models were used to evaluate the predictors of postoperative heart failure and mortality. Patients who died or experienced a second hip surgery within one year of their first were censored at that time. Any subsequent hip fracture repair was treated as a new case. To account for the inclusion of multiple hip fracture repairs for a given patient, the Cox proportional hazards model included a robust variance estimator. This provided an accurate calculation of the standard error in the presence of within‐subject correlation.20 Statistical tests were two‐sided, and P values were considered significant if less than 0.05. Statistical analyses were performed using SAS (version 9.1.3, SAS Institute, Cary, NC).

RESULTS

From among 1327 potential hip fracture repairs, we excluded 115 cases involving multiple injuries or operations (19), pathological fractures (20), in‐hospital fractures (3), or an operation >72 hours after the initial fracture (5). Three patients under 65 years of age were also excluded, as were cases with missing information (9) or cases managed nonoperatively (56). The final analysis included 1212 surgical cases in 1116 subjects. No subjects were lost to surveillance for 1 year following their hip fracture repair.

Table 1 summarizes the baseline characteristics of the study population. The overall prevalence of preoperative heart failure was 27.0% (327 of 1212). Those with preoperative heart failure were older, heavier, more likely male and white, and less likely to live independently preoperatively. They were also more likely to suffer from preexisting cardiovascular comorbidities.

Baseline Characteristics and Outcomes Among Olmsted County, Minnesota, Residents Undergoing Hip Fracture Repair, 19882002, by Preoperative Heart Failure Status
 All (N = 1,212)HF (N = 327)No HF (N = 885)P Value*
  • Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; HF, heart failure; SD, standard deviation.

  • P values for those with, vs without, preoperative heart failure (1Rank sum, 2Chi‐square, 3Fisher's exact).

  • BMI data were missing for 15 cases, preoperative ambulatory status was missing for 2 cases, and discharge disposition was missing for 1 case.

  • All values are N (%) unless otherwise noted.

  • Chronic renal insufficiency was defined as a creatinine >2.0 mg/dL.

Demographics    
Mean age (years) (SD)84.2 (7.44)85.5 (6.54)83.7 (7.70)0.00101
Male gender237 (19.6)76 (23.2)161 (18.2)0.04912
Mean BMI (kg/m2) (SD)23.3 (4.97)24.1 (5.68)23.0 (4.65)0.01231
White1,204 (99.3)322 (98.5)882 (99.7)0.03713
Preoperative living situation    
Nursing facility468 (38.6)144 (44)324 (36.6)0.01842
Home744 (61.4)183 (56)561 (63.4)0.05192
Preoperative ambulatory status    
Dependent149 (12.3)50 (15.3)99 (11.2) 
Independent1,061 (87.7)276 (84.7)785 (88.8) 
Medical history    
Hypertension705 (58.2)226 (69.1)479 (54.1)<0.00012
Diabetes mellitus143 (11.8)63 (19.3)80 (9)<0.00012
Cerebrovascular disease331 (27.3)129 (39.4)202 (22.8)<0.00012
Peripheral vascular disease195 (16.1)80 (24.5)115 (13)<0.00012
Coronary artery disease464 (38.3)237 (72.5)227 (25.6)<0.00012
Atrial fibrillation/flutter254 (21)133 (40.7)121 (13.7)<0.00012
Complete heart block18 (1.5)9 (2.8)9 (1)0.03373
Pacer at time of admission32 (2.6)16 (4.9)16 (1.8)0.00292
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease196 (16.2)78 (23.9)118 (13.3)<0.00012
Liver disease15 (1.2)7 (2.1)8 (0.9)0.13753
Chronic renal insufficiency131 (10.8)61 (18.7)70 (7.9)<0.00012
Mean length of hospitalization (days) (SD)10.0 (7.57)11.1 (8.82)9.6 (7.01)0.00101
Discharge disposition   0.00192
Home150 (12.4)26 (8.0)124 (14.0) 
Skilled nursing facility1,004 (82.9)278 (85.0)726 (82.1) 
Dead57 (4.7)23 (7.0)34 (3.9) 

Table 1 also summarizes the main outcome characteristics of the study population. Those with preoperative heart failure had longer mean lengths of stay (LOS), were more often discharged to a skilled facility, and demonstrated higher inpatient mortality rates.

Table 2 summarizes the outcomes associated with preoperative heart failure. The overall rate of postoperative heart failure was 6.7% within 7 postoperative days and 21.3% within 1 postoperative year. Postoperative heart failure was significantly more common among those with preoperative heart failure (hazard ratio [HR], 3.0; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.3 to 3.9; P < 0.001). Among those without preoperative heart failure, rates of postoperative incident heart failure were 4.8% at 7 days and 15.0% at 1 year. Compared to patients without preoperative heart failure, those with preoperative heart failure demonstrated higher one year mortality rates and higher rates of postoperative heart failure at 7 days and 1 year.

Association of Preoperative Heart Failure With Postoperative Outcomes Among Olmsted County, Minnesota, Residents Undergoing Hip Fracture Repair, 19882002
 Preoperative Heart Failure (Subjects)
OutcomeAll (N = 1212)No (N = 885)Yes (N = 327)Risk ratio* (95% CI)P Value
  • Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval.

  • Risk ratio for those with vs without preoperative heart failure. Odds ratios were calculated using logistic regression for the outcome of heart failure exacerbation within seven postoperative days; hazard ratios were calculated using Cox proportional hazards models for each of the one‐year outcomes.

  • Excluded 26 cases in which a patient died in hospital without postoperative heart failure.

  • One‐year rates were estimated using the KaplanMeier method.

Heart failure exacerbation within seven postoperative days6.7% (5.4, 8.3)4.8% (3.5, 6.5)12.1% (8.7, 16.2)2.72 (1.72, 4.31)<0.0001
One‐year postoperative heart failure exacerbation21.3% (18.8, 23.7)15.0% (12.5, 17.4)39.3% (33.3, 44.9)3.00 (2.32, 3.87)<0.0001
One‐year postoperative mortality24.5% (22.0, 26.9)19.8% (17.1, 22.4)37.2% (31.6, 42.3)2.11 (1.67, 2.67)<0.0001
One‐year postoperative mortality or heart failure exacerbation36.5% (33.7, 39.2)29.7% (26.6, 32.6)55.0% (49.3, 60.2)2.28 (1.88, 2.76)<0.0001

Figure 1 displays the outcomes to 1 year of surveillance. Rates of postoperative heart failure and postoperative mortality were consistently higher among those with, versus without, preoperative heart failure. Figure 2 displays similar data stratified by gender. Postoperative heart failure rates did not differ significantly between genders (HR, 1.0; 95% CI, 0.8 to 1.4), but postoperative mortality rates were significantly higher among males than females (HR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.5 to 2.5; P < 0.001).

Figure 1
Cumulative incidence of postoperative outcomes among Olmsted County, Minnesota, residents undergoing hip fracture repair, 1988–2002, by preoperative heart failure status. Abbreviations: HF, heart failure.
Figure 2
Cumulative incidence of postoperative outcomes among Olmsted County, Minnesota, residents undergoing hip fracture repair, 1988–2002, by gender. Abbreviations: HF, heart failure.

Figure 3 displays survival rates to 1 year based on the occurrence of incident or recurrent heart failure within the first 7 postoperative days. Survival rates were lowest among patients with recurrent heart failure in the first 7 postoperative days and highest among those with no preoperative or postoperative heart failure. Subjects with incident heart failure in the first postoperative week, and those with preoperative heart failure who did not suffer a recurrence, demonstrated intermediate survival rates (P < 0.001 for trend across all four groups).

Figure 3
Landmark survival curve to outcome of survival, by heart failure status; excluded 30 records where the patient died or underwent a second surgery before postoperative day 7. Abbreviations: HF, heart failure.

DISCUSSION

This population‐based study found that heart failure represents a highly prevalent condition in elderly patients undergoing hip fracture repairs. It demonstrates that those with preoperative heart failure typically suffer from more cardiovascular comorbidities and carry a higher risk of postoperative heart failure and postoperative mortality.

While many studies have focused on the epidemiology of hip fractures,21 population‐based data on cardiac complications following hip fracture repair are significantly less common. The ACC/AHA preoperative cardiac evaluation guidelines classify orthopedic procedures, including hip fracture repair, as intermediate risk.11 Consequently, some may assume that all orthopedic patients will have a mortality rate less than 5%. Indeed, the 30‐day postoperative mortality rate published from our institution's Total Joint Registry was 0.6% following elective total hip arthroplasty.22 However, the present study demonstrates that current ACC/AHA preoperative cardiac evaluation guidelines may not apply to the population of frail patients undergoing hip fracture repair. Particularly among those who experience new heart failure within the first seven days following surgery, outcomes are substantially worse than the ACC/AHA perioperative guidelines may suggest.11

Preoperative heart failure has been associated with adverse risk for postoperative mortality after hip fracture.9, 10, 12 However, these studies did not report heart failure as a complication of hip fracture repair. A prospective cohort study of 2448 hip fracture patients at an academic hospital in Great Britain found a 5% rate of inpatient heart failure as a postoperative complication.23 The hazard ratio for one‐year mortality was 11.3 with postoperative heart failure.23 However, the British study did not distinguish heart failure from other cardiovascular diseases as a preoperative comorbidity or stratify the risk for postoperative mortality by preoperative heart failure status.23 Our findings add to previous literature by measuring heart failure as a specific complication of hip fracture repair and examining the association of preoperative heart failure with postoperative heart failure and mortality.

Length of stay after hip fracture repair varies in the literature, but previous work has not clearly associated heart failure with length of hospitalization in the setting of hip fracture repair.24, 25 Our study found a significantly higher mean length of stay among those with preoperative heart failure. This adds to previous work by delineating an association between heart failure and increased length of stay after hip fracture repair.

We found a higher rate of postoperative mortality among men compared to women. Rates of postoperative heart failure, however, were more similar (Figure 2). Previous studies have found a consistently higher mortality rate among men versus women after hip fracture.9, 23, 2529 Possible explanations for these findings include the overall increased burden of cardiovascular disease among men, lower treatment rates of osteoporosis in men,30 and increased susceptibility to other postoperative complications, such as infection.25

The findings of this study carry important clinical implications for the perioperative care of hip fracture patients with, or at risk for, heart failure. They suggest that current risk stratification guidelines classifying orthopedic operations as intermediate risk procedures do not reflect the high risk for morbidity that hip fracture patients face.11 The association of heart failure with adverse outcomes implies the need for heightened surveillance in the perioperative period, particularly with regard to volume status and medication reconciliation. Hip fracture patients and their families must be counseled about the ramifications of perioperative heart failure, including higher rates of postoperative heart failure, longer hospitalizations, and ultimate mortality.

This research carries several limitations and remains subject to biases inherent in retrospective cohort studies. The reported effects of heart failure on outcomes after hip fracture repair may be due to confounding from age, functional status, and other comorbidities. We attempted to minimize sampling bias through complete enumeration of hip fracture surgeries among Olmsted County residents. Completeness of follow‐up (100% at one year) was possible given the availability of documentation of all inpatient and outpatient medical care in the community.17 We used objectively defined outcomes to minimize measurement bias. Applicability to a more diverse population may be limited because >95% of the research population was from a single, predominantly white community. However, prior studies have documented that hip fracture incidence rates31 and socioeconomic factors17 in Olmsted County are similar to those for other white residents of the United States. Heart failure rates were determined clinically according to the Framingham criteria. However, the Framingham criteria may inappropriately diagnose individuals with heart failure32 and falsely elevate the prevalence of heart failure as a preoperative comorbidity or postoperative complication.

The statistical analysis included patients counted multiple times if they underwent subsequent hip fracture repair during the study period. Including these patients may inaccurately inflate event rates or contribute to incorrect estimates of standard error. However, we felt it was appropriate to include recurrent hip fracture repair cases in the analysis because they represent a clinically distinct patient from both a medical and functional perspective. We used a robust variance estimator in the Cox proportional hazards models to provide an accurate calculation of the standard error given the possibility for correlation within subjects.20 Finally, the proportion of these patients was low (94 of 1116 unique patients; 8.4%).

Future work must involve further risk stratification and therapeutic interventions in perioperative hip fracture patients. A more robust analysis of heart failure, with differentiation between systolic and diastolic dysfunction, may facilitate risk stratification. Assessment of compliance with standard preoperative heart failure medications and the impact of heightened clinical vigilance may enlighten means to improve postoperative outcomes. Studies on risk stratification and therapeutic interventions may then inform policy regarding length of stay and reimbursement in hip fracture patients.

CONCLUSION

In summary, our population‐based findings reveal that heart failure represents a prevalent and serious comorbidity in patients undergoing hip fracture repair. Clinicians caring for perioperative hip fracture patients must pay particular attention to risk for, and implications of, new or recurrent heart failure.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Donna K. Lawson, LPN, Kathy Wolfert, and Cherie Dolliver for their assistance in data collection and management.

References
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  16. Myers AH,Robinson EG,Natta MLV,Michelson JD,Collins K,Baker SP.Hip fractures among the elderly: Factors associated with in‐hospital mortality.Am J Epidemiol.1991;134(10):11281137.
  17. Melton LJ.History of the Rochester Epidemiology Project.Mayo Clin Proc.1996;71(3):266274.
  18. Melton LJ.The threat to medical‐records research.N Engl J Med.1997;337(20):14661470.
  19. McKee PA,Castelli WP,McNamara PM,Kannel WB.The natural history of congestive heart failure: The Framingham Study.N Engl J Med.1971;285(26):14411446.
  20. Lin DY,Wei LJ.The robust inference for the Cox proportional hazards model.J Am Stat Assoc.1989;84(408):10741078.
  21. Marks R.Hip fracture epidemiological trends, outcomes, and risk factors, 1970–2009.Int J Gen Med.2010;3:117.
  22. Wood M,Mantilla CB,Horlocker TT,Schroeder DR,Berry DJ,Brown DL.Frequency of myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism, deep venous thrombosis, and death following primary hip or knee arthroplasty.Anesthesiology.2002;96(5):11401146.
  23. Roche JJW,Wenn RT,Sahota O,Moran CG.Effect of comorbidities and postoperative complications on mortality after hip fracture in elderly people: Prospective observational cohort study.BMJ.2005;331(7529):13741376.
  24. Bentler SE,Liu L,Obrizan M, et al.The aftermath of hip fracture: Discharge placement, functional status change, and mortality.Am J Epidemiol.2009;170(10):12901299.
  25. Wehren LE,Hawkes WG,Orwig DL,Hebel JR,Zimmerman SI,Magaziner J.Gender differences in mortality after hip fracture: The role of infection.J Bone Miner Res.2003;18(12):22312237.
  26. Center JR,Nguyen TV,Schneider D,Sambrook PN,Eisman JA.Mortality after all major types of osteoporotic fracture in men and women: An observational study.Lancet.1999;353(9156):878882.
  27. Robbins JA,Biggs ML,Cauley J.Adjusted mortality after hip fracture: From the Cardiovascular Health Study.J Am Geriatr Soc.2006;54(12):18851891.
  28. Haentjens P,Magaziner J,Colon‐Emeric CS, et al.Meta‐analysis: Excess mortality after hip fracture among older women and men.Ann Intern Med.2010;152(6):380390.
  29. Poór G,Atkinson EJ,O'Fallon WM,Melton LJ.Predictors of hip fractures in elderly men.J Bone Miner Res.1995;10(12):19001907.
  30. Curtis J,McClure L,Delzell E, et al.Population‐based fracture risk assessment and osteoporosis treatment disparities by race and gender.J Gen Intern Med.2009;24(8):956962.
  31. Melton LJ,Therneau TM,Larson DR.Long‐term trends in hip fracture prevalence: The influence of hip fracture incidence and survival.Osteoporos Int.1998;8(1):6874.
  32. Maestre A,Gil V,Gallego J,Aznar J,Mora A,Martin‐Hidalgo A.diagnostic accuracy of clinical criteria for identifying systolic and diastolic heart failure: Cross‐sectional study.J Eval Clin Pract.2009;15(1):5561.
References
  1. Melton LJ.Epidemiology of hip fractures: Implications of the exponential increase with age.Bone.1996;18(3 suppl):121S125S.
  2. Bueno H,Ross JS,Wang Y, et al.Trends in length of stay and short‐term outcomes among Medicare patients hospitalized for heart failure, 1993–2006.JAMA.2010;303(21):21412147.
  3. Koelling TM,Chen RS,Lubwama RN,L'Italien GJ,Eagle KA.The expanding national burden of heart failure in the United States: The influence of heart failure in women.Am Heart J.2004;147(1):7478.
  4. Fang J,Mensah GA,Croft JB,Keenan NL.Heart failure‐related hospitalization in the U.S., 1979 to 2004.J Am Coll Cardiol.2008;52(6):428434.
  5. van Diepen S,Majumdar SR,Bakal JA,McAlister FA,Ezekowitz JA.Heart failure is a risk factor for orthopedic fracture: A population‐based analysis of 16,294 patients.Circulation.2008;118(19):19461952.
  6. Sennerby U,Melhus H,Gedeborg R, et al.Cardiovascular diseases and risk of hip fracture.JAMA.2009;302(15):16661673.
  7. Nigwekar SU,Job AV,Kouides RW,Polashenski W.Effectiveness of hospitalist involvement in hip fracture management questioned.South Med J.2007;100(9):912913.
  8. Batsis JA,Phy MP,Melton LJ, et al.Effects of a hospitalist care model on mortality of elderly patients with hip fractures.J Hosp Med.2007;2(4):219225.
  9. Kannegaard PN,van der Mark S,Eiken P,Abrahamsen B.Excess mortality in men compared with women following a hip fracture. National analysis of comedications, comorbidity and survival.Age Ageing.2010;39(2):203209.
  10. Vestergaard P,Rejnmark L,Mosekilde L.Increased mortality in patients with a hip fracture—Effect of pre‐morbid conditions and post‐fracture complications.Osteoporos Int.2007;18(12):15831593.
  11. Fleisher LA,Beckman JA,Brown KA, et al.ACC/AHA 2007 guidelines on perioperative cardiovascular evaluation and care for noncardiac surgery: Executive summary: A report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines (Writing Committee to Revise the 2002 Guidelines on Perioperative Cardiovascular Evaluation for Noncardiac Surgery): Developed in collaboration with the American Society of Echocardiography, American Society of Nuclear Cardiology, Heart Rhythm Society, Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists, Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, Society for Vascular Medicine and Biology, and Society for Vascular Surgery.J Am Coll Cardiol.2007;50(17):17071732.
  12. Tosteson ANA,Gottlieb DJ,Radley DC,Fisher ES,Melton LJ.Excess mortality following hip fracture: The role of underlying health status.Osteoporos Int.2007;18(11):14631472.
  13. Giversen IM.Time trends of mortality after first hip fractures.Osteoporos Int.2007;18(6):721732.
  14. Hannan EL,Magaziner J,Wang JJ, et al.Mortality and locomotion 6 months after hospitalization for hip fracture: Risk factors and risk‐adjusted hospital outcomes.JAMA.2001;285(21):27362742.
  15. Meyer HE,Tverdal A,Falch JA,Pedersen JI.Factors associated with mortality after hip fracture.Osteoporos Int.2000;11(3):228232.
  16. Myers AH,Robinson EG,Natta MLV,Michelson JD,Collins K,Baker SP.Hip fractures among the elderly: Factors associated with in‐hospital mortality.Am J Epidemiol.1991;134(10):11281137.
  17. Melton LJ.History of the Rochester Epidemiology Project.Mayo Clin Proc.1996;71(3):266274.
  18. Melton LJ.The threat to medical‐records research.N Engl J Med.1997;337(20):14661470.
  19. McKee PA,Castelli WP,McNamara PM,Kannel WB.The natural history of congestive heart failure: The Framingham Study.N Engl J Med.1971;285(26):14411446.
  20. Lin DY,Wei LJ.The robust inference for the Cox proportional hazards model.J Am Stat Assoc.1989;84(408):10741078.
  21. Marks R.Hip fracture epidemiological trends, outcomes, and risk factors, 1970–2009.Int J Gen Med.2010;3:117.
  22. Wood M,Mantilla CB,Horlocker TT,Schroeder DR,Berry DJ,Brown DL.Frequency of myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism, deep venous thrombosis, and death following primary hip or knee arthroplasty.Anesthesiology.2002;96(5):11401146.
  23. Roche JJW,Wenn RT,Sahota O,Moran CG.Effect of comorbidities and postoperative complications on mortality after hip fracture in elderly people: Prospective observational cohort study.BMJ.2005;331(7529):13741376.
  24. Bentler SE,Liu L,Obrizan M, et al.The aftermath of hip fracture: Discharge placement, functional status change, and mortality.Am J Epidemiol.2009;170(10):12901299.
  25. Wehren LE,Hawkes WG,Orwig DL,Hebel JR,Zimmerman SI,Magaziner J.Gender differences in mortality after hip fracture: The role of infection.J Bone Miner Res.2003;18(12):22312237.
  26. Center JR,Nguyen TV,Schneider D,Sambrook PN,Eisman JA.Mortality after all major types of osteoporotic fracture in men and women: An observational study.Lancet.1999;353(9156):878882.
  27. Robbins JA,Biggs ML,Cauley J.Adjusted mortality after hip fracture: From the Cardiovascular Health Study.J Am Geriatr Soc.2006;54(12):18851891.
  28. Haentjens P,Magaziner J,Colon‐Emeric CS, et al.Meta‐analysis: Excess mortality after hip fracture among older women and men.Ann Intern Med.2010;152(6):380390.
  29. Poór G,Atkinson EJ,O'Fallon WM,Melton LJ.Predictors of hip fractures in elderly men.J Bone Miner Res.1995;10(12):19001907.
  30. Curtis J,McClure L,Delzell E, et al.Population‐based fracture risk assessment and osteoporosis treatment disparities by race and gender.J Gen Intern Med.2009;24(8):956962.
  31. Melton LJ,Therneau TM,Larson DR.Long‐term trends in hip fracture prevalence: The influence of hip fracture incidence and survival.Osteoporos Int.1998;8(1):6874.
  32. Maestre A,Gil V,Gallego J,Aznar J,Mora A,Martin‐Hidalgo A.diagnostic accuracy of clinical criteria for identifying systolic and diastolic heart failure: Cross‐sectional study.J Eval Clin Pract.2009;15(1):5561.
Issue
Journal of Hospital Medicine - 6(9)
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Journal of Hospital Medicine - 6(9)
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507-512
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507-512
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Impact of heart failure on hip fracture outcomes: A population‐based study
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Impact of heart failure on hip fracture outcomes: A population‐based study
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heart failure, postoperative evaluation and care, cardiovascular risk assessment
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heart failure, postoperative evaluation and care, cardiovascular risk assessment
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Division of Cardiovascular Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, MN 55905
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