Introduction Frailty is a known risk factor for falls and subsequent fractures and is linked to greater hospitalisation, morbidity, and mortality in various areas of medicine. A 2017 Trauma Audit and Research Network (TARN) report identified that further research was needed to determine the effect of frailty on outcomes in trauma patients. The UK Best Practice Tariff currently awards a financial incentive for frailty scoring for all patients sustaining major trauma who are managed at Major Trauma Centres (MTCs). However, this currently does not extend to Trauma Units (TUs) or to patients without major trauma. This retrospective cohort study sought to investigate whether frailty also has a significant effect on outcomes in patients presenting with fragility fractures presenting to trauma units without major trauma. Methods Notes from all patients aged ≥65 admitted to Gloucestershire Royal Hospital in 2019 with any fragility fracture were reviewed retrospectively. Age, injury, length of stay, and mortality were recorded. A Clinical Frailty Score (CFS) was assigned retrospectively using the Rockwood Clinical Frailty Scale. Results Eight hundred sixty patients were reviewed (male:female 258:602, mean age 83 ± 8.2). Each consecutive stepwise increase in CFS was independently associated with an average cumulative increase in mortality rate at 30-day and 1 year (OR 1.55 and 1.58 respectively, p < 0.001), as well as average cumulative percentage increase in length of stay (OR 1.094, p < 0.001). Conclusion Clinical frailty score independently predicts adverse outcome in patients with fragility fractures managed at trauma units. Clinical frailty score could be used to easily identify patients at risk of poorer outcomes and may assist in allocation of limited orthogeriatric resources and future BPT guidelines. Further work should promote recognition of frailty within trauma settings, investigate how additional resources affect outcomes for patients of varying degrees of frailty, and consider multicentre studies relating to frailty-associated outcomes in trauma.
Background Frailty has been linked to greater hospitalisation, morbidity, and mortality, and is being increasingly recognised as a possible factor affecting outcomes in trauma. A 2017 TARN report identified that further research was needed to determine the effect of frailty on outcomes in trauma patients. With fragility (low energy) fractures now make up a significant burden of trauma within UK hospitals, this retrospective cohort study investigated whether frailty has a significant effect on outcomes in patients presenting with fragility fractures. Method Notes from all patients aged >60 admitted to a large District General hospital over 1 year with any fragility fracture were reviewed. Age, injury, length of stay, and mortality were recorded. A Rockwood Clinical Frailty Score (CFS) was assigned retrospectively. Results 886 patients were reviewed (male:female 266:620, mean age 82.75). CFS was independently associated with a significant increase in mortality, with every step up in CFS increasing 30-day and 1-year odds of death by 54.8% and 56.2% respectively (P < 0.001). Every step up in CFS independently increased percentage length of stay by 10.1%. Conclusions CFS independently predicts adverse outcome in hospitalised trauma patients with fragility fractures. CFS should be used routinely to identify patients at risk and may assist in allocating limited orthogeriatric resources and supporting national guidelines. Future research should investigate how resources impact outcomes for patients of varying CFS.
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