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Implications of COVID-19 on hip fracture care discharge locations during the early stages of the pandemic

Konda, S R; Esper, G W; Meltzer-Bruhn, A T; Ganta, A; Leucht, P; Tejwani, N C; Egol, K A
Objectives:To document discharge locations for geriatric patients treated for a hip fracture before and during the COVID pandemic and subsequent changes in outcomes seen between each cohort.
Design(s):Retrospective cohort study.
Setting(s):Academic medical center.Patients/Participants:Two matched cohorts of 100 patients with hip fracture treated pre-COVID (February-May 2019) and during COVID (February-May 2020).
Intervention(s):Discharge location and COVID status on admission. Discharge locations were home (home independently or home with health services) versus facility [subacute nursing facility (SNF) or acute rehabilitation facility].Main Outcome Measurements:Readmissions, inpatient and 1-year mortality, and 1-year functional outcomes (EQ5D-3L).
Result(s):In COVID+ patients, 93% (13/14) were discharged to a facility, 62% (8/13) of whom passed away within 1 year of discharge. Of COVID+ patients discharged to an SNF, 80% (8/10) died within 1 year. Patients discharged to an SNF in 2020 were 1.8x more likely to die within 1 year compared with 2019 (P = 0.029). COVID- patients discharged to an SNF in 2020 had a 3x increased 30-day mortality rate and 1.5x increased 1-year mortality rate compared with 2019. Patients discharged to an acute rehabilitation facility in 2020 had higher rates of 90-day readmission. There was no difference in functional outcomes.
Conclusion(s):All patients, including COVID- patients, discharged to all discharge locations during the onset of the pandemic experienced a higher mortality rate as compared with prepandemic. This was most pronounced in patients discharged to a skilled nursing facility in 2020 during the early stages of the pandemic. If this trend continues, it suggests that during COVID waves, discharge planning should be conducted with the understanding that no options eliminate the increased risks associated with the pandemic.
Level of Evidence:III.
Copyright
EMBASE:2024343883
ISSN: 2574-2167
CID: 5514492

Implications of COVID-19 on hip fracture care discharge locations during the early stages of the pandemic

Konda, Sanjit R; Esper, Garrett W; Meltzer-Bruhn, Ariana T; Ganta, Abhishek; Leucht, Philipp; Tejwani, Nirmal C; Egol, Kenneth A
OBJECTIVES/UNASSIGNED:To document discharge locations for geriatric patients treated for a hip fracture before and during the COVID pandemic and subsequent changes in outcomes seen between each cohort. DESIGN/UNASSIGNED:Retrospective cohort study. SETTING/UNASSIGNED:Academic medical center. PATIENTS/PARTICIPANTS/UNASSIGNED:Two matched cohorts of 100 patients with hip fracture treated pre-COVID (February-May 2019) and during COVID (February-May 2020). INTERVENTION/UNASSIGNED:Discharge location and COVID status on admission. Discharge locations were home (home independently or home with health services) versus facility [subacute nursing facility (SNF) or acute rehabilitation facility]. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS/UNASSIGNED:Readmissions, inpatient and 1-year mortality, and 1-year functional outcomes (EQ5D-3L). RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:= 0.029). COVID- patients discharged to an SNF in 2020 had a 3x increased 30-day mortality rate and 1.5x increased 1-year mortality rate compared with 2019. Patients discharged to an acute rehabilitation facility in 2020 had higher rates of 90-day readmission. There was no difference in functional outcomes. CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:All patients, including COVID- patients, discharged to all discharge locations during the onset of the pandemic experienced a higher mortality rate as compared with prepandemic. This was most pronounced in patients discharged to a skilled nursing facility in 2020 during the early stages of the pandemic. If this trend continues, it suggests that during COVID waves, discharge planning should be conducted with the understanding that no options eliminate the increased risks associated with the pandemic. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE/UNASSIGNED:III.
PMCID:10145965
PMID: 37122587
ISSN: 2574-2167
CID: 5544722

The 2-Window Posterolateral vs Single-Window Approach for Ankle Fracture Fixation

Herbosa, Christopher G; Leucht, Philipp; Egol, Kenneth A; Tejwani, Nirmal C
BACKGROUND/UNASSIGNED:The posterolateral approach to the ankle allows for reduction and fixation of the posterior and lateral malleoli through the same surgical incision. This can be accomplished via 1 or 2 surgical "windows." The purpose of this study is to compare outcomes including wound complications following direct fixation of unstable rotational ankle fracture through the posterolateral approach using either 1 or 2 surgical windows. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:One hundred sixty-four patients with bi- or trimalleolar ankle fractures treated using the single-window posterolateral approach (between the peroneal tendons and the flexor hallucis longus [FHL]) or the 2-window technique (between the peroneal tendons and the FHL for posterior malleolus fixation; lateral to the peroneal tendons for fibula fixation) were reviewed for demographics, radiographic details, and clinical outcomes. We were able to review these 164 at the 3-month follow-up and a subset of 104 at a minimum of 12-month follow-up. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED: = .021). We did not find a significant difference in nerve complications for these 2 cohorts. CONCLUSION/UNASSIGNED:In our study, we found the single-window posterolateral approach to be associated with fewer wound complications and better postoperative range of ankle motion when compared to the 2-window approach. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE/UNASSIGNED:Level III, retrospective cohort study.
PMID: 36946551
ISSN: 1944-7876
CID: 5462822

The Lateral Femoral Cutaneous and Over the Hip (LOH) Block for the Surgical Management of Hip Fractures: A Safe and Effective Anesthetic Strategy

Deemer, Alexa R; Furgiuele, David L; Ganta, Abhishek; Leucht, Philipp; Konda, Sanjit; Tejwani, Nirmal C; Egol, Kenneth A
OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:To examine the efficacy of regional anesthesia with sedation only for a variety of hip fractures using the newly described lateral femoral cutaneous with over the hip Block (LOH Block). DESIGN/METHODS:Retrospective. SETTING/METHODS:Level-I Trauma CenterPatients/Participants: 40 patients who presented between 11/2021 and 02/2022 for fixation of OTA/AO 31.A1-3 and 31.B1-3 fractures. Matched cohorts of 40 patients who received general anesthesia and 40 patients who received spinal anesthesia for hip fracture fixation were also used. INTERVENTION/METHODS:Operative fixation under LOH block and sedation only. The LOH block is a regional hip analgesic that targets the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve, articular branches of femoral nerve (FN) and accessory obturator nerve (AON). MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS/METHODS:Demographics, intraoperative characteristics, anesthesia-related complications, hospital quality metrics, and short-term mortality and reoperation rates. RESULTS:A total of 120 patients (40 each: general, spinal, LOH block) were compared. The cohorts were similar in age, race, BMI, gender, CCI, trauma risk score, ambulatory status at baseline, fracture type, and surgical fixation technique performed. Physiologic parameters during surgery were more stable in the LOH block group (p<0.05). Total OR time and anesthesia time were shortest for the LOH block cohort (p<0.05). Patients in the LOH block cohort also had lower post-operative pain scores (p<0.05). Length of hospital stay was shortest for patients in the LOH block cohort (p<0.05), and at time of discharge, patients in the LOH block cohort ambulated the furthest (p<0.05). No differences were found in regards to anesthesia-related complications, palliative care consults, major and minor hospital complications, discharge disposition, reoperation and readmission rates, and mortality rates. CONCLUSIONS:The LOH block is safe and effective anesthesia for the treatment of all types of hip fractures in the elderly requiring surgery. In addition, this block may decrease post-operative pain and length of hospital stay, and also allow for greater ambulation in the early post-operative period for hip fracture patients. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE/METHODS:Prognostic Level III. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.
PMID: 36253914
ISSN: 1531-2291
CID: 5360312

Observational prospective unblinded case-control study to evaluate the effect of the Gamma3® distal targeting system for long nails on radiation exposure and time for distal screw placement

Konda, Sanjit R; Maseda, Meghan; Leucht, Philipp; Tejwani, Nirmal; Ganta, Abhishek; Egol, Kenneth A
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:To determine if the DTS decreases radiation exposure (primary outcome measure), fluoroscopy time (secondary outcome measure), and time to distal screw placement (secondary outcome measure) compared to the freehand "perfect circles" method when used for locking of cephalomedullary nails in the treatment of femur fractures METHODS: Fifty-eight patients with hip or femoral shaft fractures that were treated with a long cephalomedullary nail were enrolled in this study. Cohorts were determined based on the method of distal interlocking screw placement into either the "Perfect Circles" or "Distal Targeting" cohort. Time from cephalad screw placement to placement of final distal interlocking screw (seconds), radiation exposure (mGy), and fluoroscopy time (seconds) were compared between groups. Hospital quality measures were compared between cohorts. RESULTS:Use of the DTS resulted in 77% (4.3x) lower radiation exposure (p < 0.001), 64% (2.7x) lower fluoroscopy time (p < 0.001), and 60% (1.7x) lower intraoperative time from end of cephalad screw placement to end of distal interlocking screw placement (p < 0.001) compared to the freehand "perfect circles" method. There was no difference in 30-day or 90-day complication rates between cohorts. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The Stryker Gamma3® Distal Targeting System is a safe, effective and efficient alternative to the freehand "perfect circles" method.
PMID: 36517283
ISSN: 1879-0267
CID: 5382252

Decreasing Post-Operative Opioid Prescriptions Following Orthopedic Trauma Surgery: The "Lopioid" Protocol

Landes, Emma K; Leucht, Philipp; Tejwani, Nirmal C; Ganta, Abhishek; McLaurin, Toni M; Lyon, Thomas R; Konda, Sanjit R; Egol, Kenneth A
OBJECTIVE:To assess the effectiveness of a multimodal analgesic regimen containing "safer" opioid and non-narcotic pain medications in decreasing opioid prescriptions following surgical fixation in orthopedic trauma. DESIGN/METHODS:Retrospective cohort study. SETTING/METHODS:One urban, academic medical center. SUBJECTS/METHODS:Traumatic fracture patients from 2018 (848) and 2019 (931). METHODS:In 2019 our orthopedic trauma division began a standardized protocol of post-operative pain medications that included: 50 mg of tramadol four times daily, 15 mg of meloxicam once daily, 200 mg gabapentin twice daily, and 1 g of acetaminophen every 6 hours as needed. This multimodal regimen was dubbed the "Lopioid" protocol. We compared this protocol to all patients from the prior year who followed a standard protocol that included Schedule II narcotics. RESULTS:Greater mean MME were prescribed at discharge from fracture surgery under the standard protocol compared to the Lopioid protocol (252.3 vs 150.0; p < 0.001) and there was a difference in the type of opioid medication prescribed (p < 0.001). There was a difference in the number of refills filled for patients discharged with opioids after surgical treatment between standard and Lopioid cohorts (0.31 vs 0.21; p = 0.002). There was no difference in the types of medication-related complications (p = 0.710) or the need for formal pain management consults (p = 0.199), but patients in the Lopioid cohort had lower pain scores at discharge (2.2 vs 2.7; p = 0.001). CONCLUSIONS:The Lopioid protocol was effective in decreasing the amount of Schedule II narcotics prescribed at discharge and the number of opioid refills following orthopedic surgery for fractures.
PMID: 34999901
ISSN: 1526-4637
CID: 5112942

Clinical and Radiographic Comparison of Splinting Constructs for Distal Radius Fractures: an Effort to Free the Elbow

Stevens, Nicole M; Pean, Christian; Norris, Zoe; Tejwani, Nirmal
OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:To compare short term functional outcomes, reduction loss, and rates of surgery for distal radius fractures initially immobilized with a traditional sugartong splint vs clamshell splint freeing the elbow. DESIGN/METHODS:Prospective Randomized Trial. SETTING/METHODS:Level 1 Trauma Center. PATIENTS/METHODS:Eighty-nine consecutive patients sustaining distal radius fractures were enrolled between 2018 and 2020. Short term first follow up (1-2 weeks) radiographic parameters and 6 weeks for functional questionnaires were established to assess initial outcomes. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES/METHODS:Reduction loss based on radiographic criteria, rate of surgery, short term patient functional outcome using the DASH score. RESULTS:There were no differences noted in DASH scores (p-value=0.8) or loss of reduction (p-value=0.69) and splint type was not correlated with likelihood to have surgery (p=0.22). A binomial regression model demonstrated splint type was not a significant predictor variable of loss of fracture reduction in the regression model. CONCLUSIONS:These results suggest both sugartong splint and clamshell splint construct are acceptable options in the acute management of distal radius fractures. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE/METHODS:Prognostic Level II. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.
PMID: 35234732
ISSN: 1531-2291
CID: 5174452

International Orthopaedic Volunteer Opportunities in Low and Middle-Income Countries

Miclau, Theodore; MacKechnie, Madeline C; Born, Christopher T; MacKechnie, Michael A; Dyer, George S M; Yuan, Brandon J; Dawson, John; Lee, Cassandra; Ishmael, Chad R; Schreiber, Verena M; Tejwani, Nirmal C; Ulmer, Todd; Shearer, David W; Agarwal-Harding, Kiran J; Johal, Herman; Khormaee, Sariah; Sprague, Sheila; Whiting, Paul S; Roberts, Heather J; Coughlin, Richard; Gosselin, Rich; Rosenwasser, Melvin P; Johnson, Anthony; Babu, Jacob M; Dworkin, Myles; Makhni, Melvin C; McClellan, Trigg; Nwachuku, Chinenye O; Miclau, Elizabeth; Morshed, Saam
ABSTRACT/UNASSIGNED:Globally, the burden of musculoskeletal conditions continues to rise, disproportionately affecting low and middle-income countries (LMICs). The ability to meet these orthopaedic surgical care demands remains a challenge. To help address these issues, many orthopaedic surgeons seek opportunities to provide humanitarian assistance to the populations in need. While many global orthopaedic initiatives are well-intentioned and can offer short-term benefits to the local communities, it is essential to emphasize training and the integration of local surgeon-leaders. The commitment to developing educational and investigative capacity, as well as fostering sustainable, mutually beneficial partnerships in low-resource settings, is critical. To this end, global health organizations, such as the Consortium of Orthopaedic Academic Traumatologists (COACT), work to promote and ensure the lasting sustainability of musculoskeletal trauma care worldwide. This article describes global orthopaedic efforts that can effectively address musculoskeletal care through an examination of 5 domains: clinical care, clinical research, surgical education, disaster response, and advocacy.
PMID: 34932526
ISSN: 1535-1386
CID: 5108782

Compartment Syndrome of the Foot

Chen, Jeffrey S; Tejwani, Nirmal C
Foot compartment syndrome is an uncommon condition that should be recognized by all orthopedic surgeons. The clinical presentation is often less clear than other limb compartment syndromes and requires high clinical suspicion with a low threshold for direct measurement of compartment pressure. Controversy exists regarding the number of anatomic compartments and the most effective treatment. Both acute surgical intervention and delayed management can result in significant morbidity and long-term sequelae.
PMID: 34799026
ISSN: 1558-1373
CID: 5049782

A Level 1 Trauma Center's response to the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City: a qualitative and quantitative story

Fisher, Nina D; Bi, Andrew S; Aggarwal, Vinay; Leucht, Philipp; Tejwani, Nirmal C; McLaurin, Toni M
BACKGROUND:The purpose of this study is to describe a Level 1 Trauma Center's orthopedic response to the COVID-19 pandemic, and to compare outcomes of acute fracture patients pre-COVID versus during the COVID-19 pandemic. METHODS:All inpatient fracture cases performed over a 5-month period were identified and retrospective chart review performed. Patients were divided into pre- and COVID-era groups based on when surgery was performed relative to March 16, 2020 (the date elective operations were ceased), and groups were statistically compared. Patients with a COVID test result were further sub-divided into COVID negative and positive groups, and statistically compared. Statistical analysis was performed using independent t-test for continuous variables and chi-square analysis for categorical variables. RESULTS:One hundred and nineteen patients were identified, 38% females with average age of 58 years. Average length of stay was 7 days with average time from injury to surgery of 3 days and average time from admission to surgery of 1.3 days. Overall in-hospital complication rate was 29.4%, and 30-day mortality and readmission rates were 2.5% and 5%, respectively. Sixty-nine patients comprised the pre-COVID group, and 50 in the COVID-era group. There was no significant difference with respect to length of stay, time from injury to surgery, time from admission to surgery, need for post-operative ICU stay, in-hospital complication rate, 30-day mortality rate and 30-day readmission rate. Thirty-four patients had COVID testing, with 24 negative and 10 positive. COVID-positive patients had longer time from injury to surgery (8.5 days vs. 2 days, p = 0.003) and longer time from admission to surgery (2.7 days vs. 1.2 days, p = 0.034). While more COVID-positive patients required ICU admission post-operatively (60% vs. 21%, p = 0.036), there was no difference in overall complication rate. CONCLUSIONS:Orthopedic care of acute fracture patients was not affected by a global pandemic. The response of our Level 1 Trauma Center's orthopedic department can guide other hospitals if and when new surges in COVID cases arise, in order to prevent compromising appropriate orthopedic care. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE/METHODS:Prognostic III.
PMCID:7897731
PMID: 33616766
ISSN: 1633-8065
CID: 4794242