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Regional anesthesia for nonunion surgery with iliac crest bone grafting results in an increase in same day discharge

Littlefield, Connor P; Parola, Rown; Furgiuele, David; Konda, Sanjit; Egol, Kenneth A
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:The purpose of this study was to evaluate the outcomes of fracture nonunion repair with autogenous iliac crest bone graft (ICBG) under regional anesthesia alone or in combination with other techniques compared to other anesthesia techniques. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:Overall, 137 patients were identified who underwent ICBG as part of a repair of a long bone fracture nonunion between January 1, 2013 and October 1, 2020. Surgical and anesthetic records were reviewed to classify patients by anesthesia type. General, spinal, and regional anesthetics were used as either the primary anesthetic or as a combination of regional nerve block with general or spinal anesthesia. RESULTS:Administration of regional anesthesia alone or in combination with general or spinal anesthesia (RA) and general or spinal anesthesia only (GS) groups differed in nonunion site distribution (p < 0.001). RA patients were discharged the same day more often than GS patients (30.9% vs 10.0%, p = 0.009) and experienced fewer postoperative complications (p = 0.021). The RA group achieved union sooner than the GS group (by 5.3 ± 3.2 months vs. by 6.8 ± 3.2 months, p = 0.006). Mean morphine equivalent dose was similar between groups (p = 0.23). Regional anesthesia use increased from 2013 to 2020, and same day discharge surgeries simultaneously increased over the same time period. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Regional anesthesia use increased in nonunion repair surgery with ICBG from 2013 to 2020. This was associated with an increase in same day discharge, sooner time to union, and decreased postoperative complications. There was not a need for increased opioid prescription in patients that underwent regional anesthesia.
PMID: 34410505
ISSN: 1633-8065
CID: 4995592

Pain, Analgesic Use, and Patient Satisfaction With Spinal Versus General Anesthesia for Hip Fracture Surgery : A Randomized Clinical Trial

Neuman, Mark D; Feng, Rui; Ellenberg, Susan S; Sieber, Frederick; Sessler, Daniel I; Magaziner, Jay; Elkassabany, Nabil; Schwenk, Eric S; Dillane, Derek; Marcantonio, Edward R; Menio, Diane; Ayad, Sabry; Hassan, Manal; Stone, Trevor; Papp, Steven; Donegan, Derek; Marshall, Mitchell; Jaffe, J Douglas; Luke, Charles; Sharma, Balram; Azim, Syed; Hymes, Robert; Chin, Ki-Jinn; Sheppard, Richard; Perlman, Barry; Sappenfield, Joshua; Hauck, Ellen; Hoeft, Mark A; Tierney, Ann; Gaskins, Lakisha J; Horan, Annamarie D; Brown, Trina; Dattilo, James; Carson, Jeffrey L; Looke, Thomas; Bent, Sandra; Franco-Mora, Ariana; Hedrick, Pamela; Newbern, Matthew; Tadros, Rafik; Pealer, Karen; Vlassakov, Kamen; Buckley, Carolyn; Gavin, Lauren; Gorbatov, Svetlana; Gosnell, James; Steen, Talora; Vafai, Avery; Zeballos, Jose; Hruslinski, Jennifer; Cardenas, Louis; Berry, Ashley; Getchell, John; Quercetti, Nicholas; Bajracharya, Gauasan; Billow, Damien; Bloomfield, Michael; Cuko, Evis; Elyaderani, Mehrun K; Hampton, Robert; Honar, Hooman; Khoshknabi, Dilara; Kim, Daniel; Krahe, David; Lew, Michael M; Maheshwer, Conjeevram B; Niazi, Azfar; Saha, Partha; Salih, Ahmed; de Swart, Robert J; Volio, Andrew; Bolkus, Kelly; DeAngelis, Matthew; Dodson, Gregory; Gerritsen, Jeffrey; McEniry, Brian; Mitrev, Ludmil; Kwofie, M Kwesi; Belliveau, Anne; Bonazza, Flynn; Lloyd, Vera; Panek, Izabela; Dabiri, Jared; Chavez, Chris; Craig, Jason; Davidson, Todd; Dietrichs, Chad; Fleetwood, Cheryl; Foley, Mike; Getto, Chris; Hailes, Susie; Hermes, Sarah; Hooper, Andy; Koener, Greg; Kohls, Kate; Law, Leslie; Lipp, Adam; Losey, Allison; Nelson, William; Nieto, Mario; Rogers, Pam; Rutman, Steve; Scales, Garrett; Sebastian, Barbara; Stanciu, Tom; Lobel, Gregg; Giampiccolo, Michelle; Herman, Dara; Kaufman, Margit; Murphy, Bryan; Pau, Clara; Puzio, Thomas; Veselsky, Marlene; Apostle, Kelly; Boyer, Dory; Fan, Brenda Chen; Lee, Susan; Lemke, Mike; Merchant, Richard; Moola, Farhad; Payne, Kyrsten; Perey, Bertrand; Viskontas, Darius; Poler, Mark; D'Antonio, Patricia; O'Neill, Greg; Abdullah, Amer; Fish-Fuhrmann, Jamie; Giska, Mark; Fidkowski, Christina; Guthrie, Stuart Trent; Hakeos, William; Hayes, Lillian; Hoegler, Joseph; Nowak, Katherine; Beck, Jeffery; Cuff, Jaslynn; Gaski, Greg; Haaser, Sharon; Holzman, Michael; Malekzadeh, A Stephen; Ramsey, Lolita; Schulman, Jeff; Schwartzbach, Cary; Azefor, Tangwan; Davani, Arman; Jaberi, Mahmood; Masear, Courtney; Haider, Syed Basit; Chungu, Carolyn; Ebrahimi, Ali; Fikry, Karim; Marcantonio, Andrew; Shelvan, Anitha; Sanders, David; Clarke, Collin; Lawendy, Abdel; Schwartz, Gary; Garg, Mohit; Kim, Joseph; Caruci, Juan; Commeh, Ekow; Cuevas, Randy; Cuff, Germaine; Franco, Lola; Furgiuele, David; Giuca, Matthew; Allman, Melissa; Barzideh, Omid; Cossaro, James; D'Arduini, Armando; Farhi, Anita; Gould, Jason; Kafel, John; Patel, Anuj; Peller, Abraham; Reshef, Hadas; Safur, Mohammed; Toscano, Fiore; Tedore, Tiffany; Akerman, Michael; Brumberger, Eric; Clark, Sunday; Friedlander, Rachel; Jegarl, Anita; Lane, Joseph; Lyden, John P; Mehta, Nili; Murrell, Matthew T; Painter, Nathan; Ricci, William; Sbrollini, Kaitlyn; Sharma, Rahul; Steel, Peter A D; Steinkamp, Michele; Weinberg, Roniel; Wellman, David Stephenson; Nader, Antoun; Fitzgerald, Paul; Ritz, Michaela; Bryson, Greg; Craig, Alexandra; Farhat, Cassandra; Gammon, Braden; Gofton, Wade; Harris, Nicole; Lalonde, Karl; Liew, Allan; Meulenkamp, Bradley; Sonnenburg, Kendra; Wai, Eugene; Wilkin, Geoffrey; Troxell, Karen; Alderfer, Mary Ellen; Brannen, Jason; Cupitt, Christopher; Gerhart, Stacy; McLin, Renee; Sheidy, Julie; Yurick, Katherine; Chen, Fei; Dragert, Karen; Kiss, Geza; Malveaux, Halina; McCloskey, Deborah; Mellender, Scott; Mungekar, Sagar S; Noveck, Helaine; Sagebien, Carlos; Biby, Luat; McKelvy, Gail; Richards, Anna; Abola, Ramon; Ayala, Brittney; Halper, Darcy; Mavarez, Ana; Rizwan, Sabeen; Choi, Stephen; Awad, Imad; Flynn, Brendan; Henry, Patrick; Jenkinson, Richard; Kaustov, Lilia; Lappin, Elizabeth; McHardy, Paul; Singh, Amara; Donnelly, Joanne; Gonzalez, Meera; Haydel, Christopher; Livelsberger, Jon; Pazionis, Theresa; Slattery, Bridget; Vazquez-Trejo, Maritza; Baratta, Jaime; Cirullo, Michael; Deiling, Brittany; Deschamps, Laura; Glick, Michael; Katz, Daniel; Krieg, James; Lessin, Jennifer; Mojica, Jeffrey; Torjman, Marc; Jin, Rongyu; Salpeter, Mary Jane; Powell, Mark; Simmons, Jeffrey; Lawson, Prentiss; Kukreja, Promil; Graves, Shanna; Sturdivant, Adam; Bryant, Ayesha; Crump, Sandra Joyce; Verrier, Michelle; Green, James; Menon, Matthew; Applegate, Richard; Arias, Ana; Pineiro, Natasha; Uppington, Jeffrey; Wolinsky, Phillip; Gunnett, Amy; Hagen, Jennifer; Harris, Sara; Hollen, Kevin; Holloway, Brian; Horodyski, Mary Beth; Pogue, Trevor; Ramani, Ramachandran; Smith, Cameron; Woods, Anna; Warrick, Matthew; Flynn, Kelly; Mongan, Paul; Ranganath, Yatish; Fernholz, Sean; Ingersoll-Weng, Esperanza; Marian, Anil; Seering, Melinda; Sibenaller, Zita; Stout, Lori; Wagner, Allison; Walter, Alicia; Wong, Cynthia; Orwig, Denise; Goud, Maithri; Helker, Chris; Mezenghie, Lydia; Montgomery, Brittany; Preston, Peter; Schwartz, J Sanford; Weber, Ramona; Fleisher, Lee A; Mehta, Samir; Stephens-Shields, Alisa J; Dinh, Cassandra; Chelly, Jacques E; Goel, Shiv; Goncz, Wende; Kawabe, Touichi; Khetarpal, Sharad; Monroe, Amy; Shick, Vladislav; Breidenstein, Max; Dominick, Timothy; Friend, Alexander; Mathews, Donald; Lennertz, Richard; Sanders, Robert; Akere, Helen; Balweg, Tyler; Bo, Amber; Doro, Christopher; Goodspeed, David; Lang, Gerald; Parker, Maggie; Rettammel, Amy; Roth, Mary; White, Marissa; Whiting, Paul; Allen, Brian F S; Baker, Tracie; Craven, Debra; McEvoy, Matt; Turnbo, Teresa; Kates, Stephen; Morgan, Melanie; Willoughby, Teresa; Weigel, Wade; Auyong, David; Fox, Ellie; Welsh, Tina; Cusson, Bruce; Dobson, Sean; Edwards, Christopher; Harris, Lynette; Henshaw, Daryl; Johnson, Kathleen; McKinney, Glen; Miller, Scott; Reynolds, Jon; Segal, B Scott; Turner, Jimmy; VanEenenaam, David; Weller, Robert; Lei, Jineli; Treggiari, Miriam; Akhtar, Shamsuddin; Blessing, Marcelle; Johnson, Chanel; Kampp, Michael; Kunze, Kimberly; O'Connor, Mary; Looke, Thomas; Tadros, Rafik; Vlassakov, Kamen; Cardenas, Louis; Bolkus, Kelly; Mitrev, Ludmil; Kwofie, M Kwesi; Dabiri, Jared; Lobel, Gregg; Poler, Mark; Giska, Mark; Sanders, David; Schwartz, Gary; Giuca, Matthew; Tedore, Tiffany; Nader, Antoun; Bryson, Greg; Troxell, Karen; Kiss, Geza; Choi, Stephen; Powell, Mark; Applegate, Richard; Warrick, Matthew; Ranganath, Yatish; Chelly, Jacques E; Lennertz, Richard; Sanders, Robert; Allen, Brian F S; Kates, Stephen; Weigel, Wade; Li, Jinlei; Wijeysundera, Duminda N; Kheterpal, Sachin; Moore, Reneé H; Smith, Alexander K; Tosi, Laura L; Looke, Thomas; Mehta, Samir; Fleisher, Lee; Hruslinski, Jennifer; Ramsey, Lolita; Langlois, Christine; Mezenghie, Lydia; Montgomery, Brittany; Oduwole, Samuel; Rose, Thomas
BACKGROUND:The REGAIN (Regional versus General Anesthesia for Promoting Independence after Hip Fracture) trial found similar ambulation and survival at 60 days with spinal versus general anesthesia for hip fracture surgery. Trial outcomes evaluating pain, prescription analgesic use, and patient satisfaction have not yet been reported. OBJECTIVE:To compare pain, analgesic use, and satisfaction after hip fracture surgery with spinal versus general anesthesia. DESIGN:Preplanned secondary analysis of a pragmatic randomized trial. (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02507505). SETTING:46 U.S. and Canadian hospitals. PARTICIPANTS:Patients aged 50 years or older undergoing hip fracture surgery. INTERVENTION:Spinal or general anesthesia. MEASUREMENTS:Pain on postoperative days 1 through 3; 60-, 180-, and 365-day pain and prescription analgesic use; and satisfaction with care. RESULTS:A total of 1600 patients were enrolled. The average age was 78 years, and 77% were women. A total of 73.5% (1050 of 1428) of patients reported severe pain during the first 24 hours after surgery. Worst pain over the first 24 hours after surgery was greater with spinal anesthesia (rated from 0 [no pain] to 10 [worst pain imaginable]; mean difference, 0.40 [95% CI, 0.12 to 0.68]). Pain did not differ across groups at other time points. Prescription analgesic use at 60 days occurred in 25% (141 of 563) and 18.8% (108 of 574) of patients assigned to spinal and general anesthesia, respectively (relative risk, 1.33 [CI, 1.06 to 1.65]). Satisfaction was similar across groups. LIMITATION:Missing outcome data and multiple outcomes assessed. CONCLUSION:Severe pain is common after hip fracture. Spinal anesthesia was associated with more pain in the first 24 hours after surgery and more prescription analgesic use at 60 days compared with general anesthesia. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE:
PMID: 35696684
ISSN: 1539-3704
CID: 5277802

Standardized Preoperative Pathways Determining Preoperative Echocardiogram Usage Continue to Improve Hip Fracture Quality

Esper, Garrett; Anil, Utkarsh; Konda, Sanjit; Furgiuele, David; Zaretsky, Jonah; Egol, Kenneth
Introduction/UNASSIGNED:The purpose of this study was to assess the hospital quality measures and outcomes of operative hip fracture patients before and after implementation of an anesthesiology department protocol assigning decision for a preoperative transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE) to the hospitalist co-managing physician. Materials and Methods/UNASSIGNED:Demographics, injury details, hospital quality measures, and outcomes were reviewed for a consecutive series of patients presenting to our institution with an operative hip fracture. In May of 2019, a new protocol assigning the responsibility to indicate a patient for preoperative TTE was mandated to the co-managing hospitalist at the institution. Patients were split into pre-protocol and post-protocol cohorts. Linear regression modeling and comparative analyses were conducted with a Bonferroni adjusted alpha as appropriate. Results/UNASSIGNED:Between September 2015 and June 2021, 1002 patients presented to our institution and were diagnosed with a hip fracture. Patients in the post-protocol cohort were less likely to undergo a preoperative echocardiogram, experienced a shorter time (days) to surgery, shorter length of stay, an increase in amount of home discharges, and lower complication risks for urinary tract infection and acute blood loss anemia as compared to those in the pre-protocol cohort. There were no differences seen in inpatient or 30-day mortality. Multivariable linear regression demonstrated a patient's comorbidity profile (Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI)) and their date of presentation (pre- or post-protocol), were both associated with (P<0.01) a patients' time to surgery. Conclusion/UNASSIGNED:A standardized preoperative work flow protocol regarding which physician evaluates and determines which patients require a preoperative TTE allows for a streamlined perioperative course for hip fracture patients. This allows for a shortened time to surgery and length of stay with an increase in home discharges and was associated with a reduced risk of common index hospitalization complications including UTI and anemia.
PMCID:9016569
PMID: 35450301
ISSN: 2151-4585
CID: 5218572

Posterior Shoulder Instability After Infraclavicular Block for Outpatient Hand Surgery

Kanakamedala, Ajay C; Bookman, Jared S; Furgiuele, David L; Hacquebord, Jacques H
Regional blocks are being increasingly utilized for anesthesia for various orthopedic procedures. Several studies have shown that regional anesthesia has fewer side effects and improved postoperative pain relief compared to general anesthesia, but regional blocks are not without risks. We present case reports of 2 patients who experienced posterior shoulder instability, one of whom had a posterior shoulder dislocation, immediately in the postanesthesia care unit after undergoing hand surgery with regional anesthesia. This paper highlights the importance of being aware that patients might be at increased risk of shoulder instability after upper extremity regional anesthesia, and appropriate perioperative precautions should be taken.
PMID: 34963364
ISSN: 1558-9455
CID: 5108162

Regional Anesthesia for Clavicle Fracture Surgery is Safe and Effective

Ryan, Devon J; Iofin, Natalia; Furgiuele, David; Johnson, Joseph; Egol, Kenneth
BACKGROUND:Historically, clavicle fracture repairs have been performed under general anesthesia. However, in the last few years, the combination of an interscalene brachial plexus block and a modified superficial cervical plexus block has been described to provide adequate anesthesia for clavicle fracture surgery, with the added benefit of postoperative analgesia. Members of our anesthesiology department began utilizing this block with sedation for a subset of patients undergoing clavicle fracture fixation in March, 2013. METHODS:This study is a retrospective review of patients who underwent clavicle fracture repair at a single institution between June, 2014 and November, 2017. The decision for type of anesthesia (regional vs. general) was made jointly by the patient, anesthesiologist, and surgeon. Demographic data, relevant perioperative times, and intraoperative pain medication consumption were recorded, and comparisons were made in these variables between the regional and general groups. RESULTS:A total of 110 patients with 110 fractures were included. Fifty-two patients received regional anesthesia only with the combined block, while 58 patients received general anesthesia with an interscalene brachial plexus block. There were no major anesthetic-related complications noted in any patients, and there were no cases in which regional anesthesia had to be converted to general anesthesia because of block failure. Anesthesia start time was significantly longer in the general anesthesia group (29 vs. 20 minutes, p=0.022), as was total case time (164 vs. 131 minutes, p<0.001). Patients in the general group required significantly more intraoperative fentanyl administration (207 vs. 141 mcg, p=0.002). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Regional anesthesia using a combined brachial plexus and modified superficial cervical plexus is a reliable, efficacious technique. The combined block appears to be a reasonable alternative to general anesthesia with interscalene brachial plexus block, and may have benefits with regards to anesthesia start time and total case time. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE/METHODS:Level III; Retrospective Cohort Comparison; Treatment Study.
PMID: 33197587
ISSN: 1532-6500
CID: 4672402

Adductor Canal Blocks Reduce Inpatient Opioid Consumption While Maintaining Noninferior Pain Control and Functional Outcomes After Total Knee Arthroplasty

Feng, James E; Ikwuazom, Chibuokem P; Umeh, Uchenna O; Furgiuele, David L; Slover, James D; Macaulay, William; Long, William J; Schwarzkopf, Ran
BACKGROUND:The use of perioperative adductor canal blocks (PABs) continues to be a highly debated topic for total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Here, we evaluate the effect of PABs on immediate postoperative subjective pain scores, opioid consumption, and objective functional outcomes. METHODS:On December 1, 2019, an institution-wide policy change was begun to use PABs in primary elective TKAs. Patient demographics, immediate postoperative nursing documented pain scores, opioid administration events, and validated physical therapy functional scores were prospectively collected as part of the standard of care and retrospectively queried through our electronic data warehouse. A historical comparison cohort was derived from consecutive patients undergoing TKA between July 1, 2019 and November 30, 2019. RESULTS:405 primary TKAs received PABs, while 789 patients were in the control cohort. Compared with controls, average verbal rating scale pain scores were lower among PAB recipients from 0-12 hours (2.42 ± 1.60 vs 2.05 ± 1.60; <.001) and 24-36 hours (4.92 ± 2.00 vs 4.47 ± 2.27; <.01). PAB recipients demonstrated significantly lower opioid consumption within the first 24 hours (44.34 ± 40.98 vs 36.83 ± 48.13; P < .01) and during their total inpatient stay (92.27 ± 109.81 vs 77.52 ± 123.11; <.05). AM-PAC scores within the first 24 hours were also higher for PABs (total scores: 20.28 ± 3.06 vs 20.71 ± 3.12; <.05). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:While the minimal clinically important differences in pain scores and functional status were comparable between both cohorts, patients demonstrated a significant reduction in overall inpatient opiate consumption after the introduction of PABs. Surgeons should consider these findings when evaluating for perioperative pain management, opioid-sparing, and rapid discharge protocols.
PMID: 33618955
ISSN: 1532-8406
CID: 4794342

[S.l. : American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons], 2020

Adductor Canal Blocks Significantly Improve Postoperative Pain, Opioid Consumption and Function in TKA

Feng, James E; Mahure, Siddharth A; Waren, Daniel; Ikwuazom, Chibuokem P; Umeh, Uchenna; Furgiuele, David L; Slover, James D; Macaulay, William; Long, William J; Schwarzkopf, Ran
(Website)
CID: 4840332

Modification of a Validated Risk Stratification Tool to Characterize Geriatric Hip Fracture Outcomes and Optimize Care in a Post-COVID-19 World

Konda, Sanjit R; Ranson, Rachel A; Solasz, Sara J; Dedhia, Nicket; Lott, Ariana; Bird, Mackenzie L; Landes, Emma K; Aggarwal, Vinay K; Bosco, Joseph A; Furgiuele, David L; Gould, Jason; Lyon, Thomas R; McLaurin, Toni M; Tejwani, Nirmal C; Zuckerman, Joseph D; Leucht, Philipp; Ganta, Abhishek; Egol, Kenneth A
OBJECTIVES:(1) To demonstrate how a risk assessment tool modified to account for the COVID-19 virus during the current global pandemic is able to provide risk assessment for low-energy geriatric hip fracture patients. (2) To provide a treatment algorithm for care of COVID-19 positive/suspected hip fractures patients that accounts for their increased risk of morbidity and mortality. SETTING:One academic medical center including 4 Level 1 trauma centers, 1 university-based tertiary care referral hospital, and 1 orthopaedic specialty hospital. PATIENTS/PARTICIPANTS:One thousand two hundred seventy-eight patients treated for hip fractures between October 2014 and April 2020, including 136 patients treated during the COVID-19 pandemic between February 1, 2020 and April 15, 2020. INTERVENTION:The Score for Trauma Triage in the Geriatric and Middle-Aged ORIGINAL (STTGMAORIGINAL) score was modified by adding COVID-19 virus as a risk factor for mortality to create the STTGMACOVID score. Patients were stratified into quartiles to demonstrate differences in risk distribution between the scores. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS:Inpatient and 30-day mortality, major, and minor complications. RESULTS:Both STTGMA score and COVID-19 positive/suspected status are independent predictors of inpatient mortality, confirming their use in risk assessment models for geriatric hip fracture patients. Compared with STTGMAORIGINAL, where COVID-19 patients are haphazardly distributed among the risk groups and COVID-19 inpatient and 30 days mortalities comprise 50% deaths in the minimal-risk and low-risk cohorts, the STTGMACOVID tool is able to triage 100% of COVID-19 patients and 100% of COVID-19 inpatient and 30 days mortalities into the highest risk quartile, where it was demonstrated that these patients have a 55% rate of pneumonia, a 35% rate of acute respiratory distress syndrome, a 22% rate of inpatient mortality, and a 35% rate of 30 days mortality. COVID-19 patients who are symptomatic on presentation to the emergency department and undergo surgical fixation have a 30% inpatient mortality rate compared with 12.5% for patients who are initially asymptomatic but later develop symptoms. CONCLUSION:The STTGMA tool can be modified for specific disease processes, in this case to account for the COVID-19 virus and provide a robust risk stratification tool that accounts for a heretofore unknown risk factor. COVID-19 positive/suspected status portends a poor outcome in this susceptible trauma population and should be included in risk assessment models. These patients should be considered a high risk for perioperative morbidity and mortality. Patients with COVID-19 symptoms on presentation should have surgery deferred until symptoms improve or resolve and should be reassessed for surgical treatment versus definitive nonoperative treatment with palliative care and/or hospice care. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE:Prognostic Level III. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of Levels of Evidence.
PMID: 32815845
ISSN: 1531-2291
CID: 4574902

Increased Mortality and Major Complications in Hip Fracture Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A New York City Perspective

Egol, Kenneth A; Konda, Sanjit R; Bird, Mackenzie L; Dedhia, Nicket; Landes, Emma K; Ranson, Rachel A; Solasz, Sara J; Aggarwal, Vinay K; Bosco, Joseph A; Furgiuele, David L; Ganta, Abhishek; Gould, Jason; Lyon, Thomas R; McLaurin, Toni M; Tejwani, Nirmal C; Zuckerman, Joseph D; Leucht, Philipp
OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:To examine one health system's response to the essential care of its hip fracture population during the COVID-19 pandemic and report on its effect on patient outcomes. DESIGN/METHODS:Prospective cohort study SETTING:: Seven musculoskeletal care centers with New York City and Long Island. PATIENTS/PARTICIPANTS/METHODS:138 recent and 115 historical hip fracture patients. INTERVENTION/METHODS:Patients with hip fractures occurring between February 1, 2020 and April 15, 2020 or between February 1, 2019 and April 15, 2019 were prospectively enrolled in an orthopedic trauma registry and chart reviewed for demographic and hospital quality measures. Patients with recent hip fractures were identified as COVID positive (C+), COVID suspected (Cs) or COVID negative (C-). MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS/METHODS:Hospital quality measures, inpatient complications and mortality rates. RESULTS:Seventeen (12.2%) patients were confirmed C+ by testing and another 14 (10.1%) were suspected (Cs) of having had the virus but were never tested. The C+ cohort, when compared to Cs and C- cohorts, had: an increased mortality rate (35.3% vs 7.1% vs 0.9%), increased length of hospital stay, a greater major complication rate and a greater incidence of ventilator need postoperatively. CONCLUSIONS:COVID-19 had a devastating effect on the care of hip fracture patients during the pandemic. Although practice patterns generally remained unchanged, treating physicians need to understand the increased morbidity and mortality in hip fracture patients complicated by COVID-19. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE/METHODS:Prognostic Level III. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of Levels of Evidence.
PMID: 32482976
ISSN: 1531-2291
CID: 4468782

Anesthesia residents awareness of the clinical learning environment [Meeting Abstract]

Wajda, M; Poole, M; Furgiuele, D; Zolnowski, I; Primm, A; Tepgenhardt, L; Kendale, S
ORIGINAL:0011715
ISSN: 1526-7598
CID: 2399602