Functional Status Geriatric Scores: Single-Handed Tools for 30-Day Mortality Risk After Hip Fracture
Carmen da Casa, Carmen Pablos‐Hernández, Alfonso González‐Ramírez, Juan F. Blanco
Abstract
Background: The 30-day mortality rate after hip fracture surgery has been considered as an indirect indicator of the quality of care. This work aims to appraise the Barthel Index, Katz Index, Lawton-Brody Index, and Physical Red Cross Scale registered in the Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment at admission on the of 30-day death probability after hip fracture surgery. Methods: Prospective study including 899 hip fracture patients over 65. Bed-ridden, non-surgically treated patients, and high energy trauma or tumoral etiology fractures were excluded. Variables distribution were assessed by χ 2 , U-Mann Whitney and we performed binary logistic regression and equal tailed Jeffreys 95% CI for risk assessment. P< 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results: We noted a 30-day mortality rate of 5.9%. We related Barthel Index (OR=0.986 [0.975– 0.996], p=0.010), Katz Index (OR=1.254 [1.089– 1.444], p=0.002), Lawton-Brody Index (OR=0.885 [0.788– 0.992], p=0.037), and Physical Red Cross Scale (OR=1.483 [1.094– 2.011], p=0.011) with the 30-day mortality of patients after hip fracture surgery. We also validated the Barthel Index inflection point (0– 55) (OR BI(0– 55) =2.428 [1.379– 4.275], p=0.002) and Katz Index inflection point (A-B) (OR KI(A-B) =0.493 [0.273– 0.891], p=0.019) for the assessment of the highest risked patients. Conclusion: The geriatric functional status scores would be useful multifunctional and standalone tools in the assessment of hip fracture patients as singly predictors of 30-day mortality. Keywords: comprehensive geriatric assessment, hip fracture, mortality, geriatric scores