Hospitalisation from fractures in New Zealand octogenarians: LiLACS NZ

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q2 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Catherine J. Bacon, Simon A. Moyes, Joanna Hikaka, Ruth Teh, Astrid E. A. Atlasz, Ngaire Kerse
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Summary

Longitudinal data quantifying fracture rates beyond 80 years are lacking. Over 5 years, hospitalised fracture incidences increased by 85% in Māori and 73% in non-Māori octogenarians. However, while fracture-related hospital nights increased by 107% in non-Māori, they remained stable for Māori. Hospitalised fracture risk increases markedly with 5 years of advanced ageing.

Purpose

Fractures become increasingly common in people beyond 80 years, the most serious resulting in hospitalisation. This study examines longitudinal changes in hospitalised fractures in octogenarians.

Methods

Hospital discharge records from a cohort study of Māori aged 80–90 years and non-Māori turning 85 years (LiLACS NZ) were used to determine the incidence of hospitalised fractures for 5 years before and 5 years after enrolment.

Results

Records were available for 378 Māori (aged 82.6 ± 2.8 years; mean ± SD) and 498 non-Māori (84.6 ± 0.5 years). In the 5 years prior to enrolment, 22 (5.8%) Māori and 43 (8.6%) non-Māori were hospitalised at least once for fracture, and 29 (7.7%) Māori and 62 (12.4%) non-Māori sustained hospitalised fractures in the 5 years following enrolment. Hospitalised fracture incidences were 1270/100,000 person-years in Māori and 2048/100,000 person-years in non-Māori before enrolment, increasing to 2345 (P = 0.02) and 3541 (P = 0.002) /100,000 person-years in the subsequent 5 years, respectively. Pelvis/femoral fractures accounted for almost half (47%) of fractures. Fracture-related hospital nights increased 107% in non-Māori (P < 0.0001), but remained stable for Māori, from before to after enrolment. Following enrolment, 21% of hospital nights spent by non-Māori women were fracture-related.

Conclusion

In octogenarians, hospitalised fracture risk increased markedly with 5 years of ageing, almost doubling fracture-related hospitalisation time in non-Māori but having little effect on time spent in hospital for Māori. Projections of fracture burden in advanced age need to consider rapidly changing risk with small increases in age and differences between demographic groups.

新西兰80多岁老人骨折住院治疗:LiLACS NZ
目前还缺乏量化80年以上骨折率的纵向数据。5年后,住院骨折发生率在Māori中增加85%,在non-Māori中增加73%。然而,虽然non-Māori与骨折相关的住院夜数增加了107%,但Māori保持稳定。住院骨折的风险随着5年的高龄而显著增加。骨折在80岁以上的人群中越来越常见,最严重的导致住院治疗。本研究探讨了八旬老人住院骨折的纵向变化。方法采用一项队列研究Māori 80-90岁和non-Māori 85岁(LiLACS NZ)的出院记录,确定入组前5年和入组后5年住院骨折的发生率。结果有记录378例Māori(年龄82.6±2.8岁;平均±SD)和498 non-Māori(84.6±0.5年)。在入组前的5年中,22名(5.8%)Māori和43名(8.6%)non-Māori因骨折至少住院一次,29名(7.7%)Māori和62名(12.4%)non-Māori在入组后的5年内持续住院骨折。入组前,Māori和non-Māori的住院骨折发生率分别为1270/10万人-年和2048/10万人-年,在随后的5年中分别增加到2345 (P = 0.02)和3541 (P = 0.002) /10万人-年。骨盆/股骨折几乎占骨折总数的一半(47%)。与骨折相关的住院夜数在non-Māori中增加了107% (P < 0.0001),但在Māori中,从入组前到入组后保持稳定。入组后,non-Māori女性21%的住院时间与骨折有关。结论在80多岁的老年人中,随着年龄的增长,住院骨折的风险明显增加,non-Māori的住院时间几乎增加了一倍,但对Māori的住院时间影响不大。高龄骨折负担的预测需要考虑快速变化的风险,年龄的小幅增加和人口群体之间的差异。
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来源期刊
Archives of Osteoporosis
Archives of Osteoporosis ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISMORTHOPEDICS -ORTHOPEDICS
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
10.00%
发文量
133
期刊介绍: Archives of Osteoporosis is an international multidisciplinary journal which is a joint initiative of the International Osteoporosis Foundation and the National Osteoporosis Foundation of the USA. The journal will highlight the specificities of different regions around the world concerning epidemiology, reference values for bone density and bone metabolism, as well as clinical aspects of osteoporosis and other bone diseases.
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