Trends and epidemiology of spine fractures in the super-elderly population in the United States.

IF 1.4 Q2 OTORHINOLARYNGOLOGY
Charles T Cush, Joseph M Stefko, Hayden M Jaworski, Joseph G Lyons
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Abstract

Introduction: Spine fractures occur commonly in the geriatric population. Super-elderly individuals (i.e., those 80 years of age and older) represent a growing segment of the population and are especially prone to these fractures. The contemporary epidemiology of spine fractures in the super-elderly population is incompletely described in the literature.

Materials and methods: This descriptive epidemiology study used the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System to examine the incidence and recent trends of spine fractures occurring among super-elderly individuals in the United States (US) from 2011 to 2020. Annual, overall, and age-/sex-specific incidence rates (IRs) were analyzed. Average annual percent change (AAPC) estimates were calculated to indicate the magnitude/direction of trends in annual injury rates.

Results: An estimated n = 385,375 super-elderly patients sustained spine fractures over the 10-year study period for an overall IR of 31.5 per 10,000 person-years at-risk. Lumbar fractures (IR = 16.3) were the most common, followed by thoracic (IR = 9.4) and cervical (IR = 6.9) fractures. Incidence was significantly higher in super-elderly females (IR = 35.6) than in males (IR = 24.8). Incidence was significantly higher in nonagenarians (IR = 50.7) and centenarians (IR = 42.6) than in octogenarians (IR = 26.8). Accounting for population growth yielded a significantly increasing incidence over the study period from 20.8 in 2011 to 40.3 in 2020 (AAPC = 8, P < 0.0001).

Conclusions: This study suggests that the annual incidence of spine fractures in the oldest cohort of patients in the US (80 + years of age) increased significantly during the recent decade from 2011 to 2020. Increased IRs highlight the need for future research aimed at optimizing outcomes and quality of life in this frail and ever-growing segment of the population.

美国超高龄人群脊柱骨折的趋势和流行病学。
导言脊椎骨折常见于老年人群。超高龄人群(即 80 岁及以上的老年人)在人口中的比例越来越大,尤其容易发生此类骨折。文献中对超高龄人群脊柱骨折的当代流行病学描述并不完整:这项描述性流行病学研究利用美国国家电子伤害监测系统(National Electronic Injury Surveillance System)研究了 2011 年至 2020 年美国超高龄人群脊柱骨折的发病率和最新趋势。研究分析了年度、总体和年龄/性别特异性发病率(IRs)。计算了年均百分比变化(AAPC)估计值,以显示年受伤率趋势的幅度/方向:在 10 年的研究期间,估计有 n = 385,375 名超高年龄患者发生了脊柱骨折,总体 IR 为每 10,000 人-年-风险中 31.5 例。腰椎骨折(IR = 16.3)最为常见,其次是胸椎骨折(IR = 9.4)和颈椎骨折(IR = 6.9)。超老年女性的发病率(IR = 35.6)明显高于男性(IR = 24.8)。非高龄老人(IR = 50.7)和百岁老人(IR = 42.6)的发病率明显高于八旬老人(IR = 26.8)。考虑到人口增长因素,研究期间的发病率从 2011 年的 20.8 例显著上升至 2020 年的 40.3 例(AAPC = 8,P < 0.0001):本研究表明,在 2011 年至 2020 年的近十年间,美国最年长患者群体(80 岁以上)的脊柱骨折年发生率显著增加。IR的增加凸显了未来研究的必要性,旨在优化这一体弱且不断增长的人群的治疗效果和生活质量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
9.10%
发文量
57
审稿时长
12 weeks
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