The impact of hip fracture on health-related quality of life and activities of daily living : the SPARE-HIP prospective cohort study

Autor: I. Etxebarria-Foronda, C. Martín-Hernández, J. Martínez-Iñiguez Blasco, J. Rodriguez Solis, I Andres Cano, Daniel Prieto-Alhambra, C. Pablos Hernández, I. Perez-Coto, L Rodríguez Mañas, Abel Herrera, G Adrados Bueno, Antony Palmer, D. Mifsut, I. Aguado-Maestro, O Torregrosa Suau, J Teixidor Serra, L Ezquerra Herrando, M. F. Bravo Bardaji, M. Salomó-Domènech, A Diez-Perez, M. Barres-Carsi, L. Gracia Delgado, Xavier Nogués, H. Kessel, E Vaquero-Cervino, S. Mills, José Ramón Caeiro-Rey, L. D. R. Evangelista, B. Llado Ferrer, Fátima Brañas, D. Moral-Cuesta
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
Zdroj: Dipòsit Digital de Documents de la UAB
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Archives of Osteoporosis
r-INCLIVA. Repositorio Institucional de Producción Científica de INCLIVA
instname
ISSN: 1862-3522
Popis: PurposeThe medical morbidity and mortality associated with neck of femur fractures is well-documented, whereas there is limited data for patient-reported outcomes. The aim of this study was to characterize the impact of neck of femur fractures on activities of daily living and patient-reported health-related quality of life.MethodsDesign and participants: Multicentric prospective cohort study. Consecutive sample patients with fragility hip fracture over 50years old admitted in 48 hospitals in Spain.Outcomes: daily living activity function (Barthel Index) and health-related quality of life (EQ-5D) pre-fracture, admission to hospital and at 1- and 4-month follow-up post-fracture.Statistics: Barthel and EQ-5D over time are described as mean (SD) and median (interquartile range).ResultsA total of 997 patients were recruited at baseline with 4-month outcomes available for, and 856 patients (89.5%). Barthel Index fell from 78.77 (23.75) at baseline to 43.62 (19.86) on admission to hospital with the fracture. Scores partially recovered to 54.89 (25.40) and 64.09 (21.35) at 1- and 4-month post-fracture, respectively. EQ-5D fell from a median of 0.75 (0.47-0.91) to -0.01 (-0.03 to 0.51) on admission. Partial recovery was observed again to (0.51 (-0.06 to 0.67)) and (0.60 (0.10 to 0.80)) at 1- and 4-month post-fracture, respectively.ConclusionsHip fracture results in a large decline in the ability to perform activities of daily living and patient-reported health-related quality of life with only partial recovery amongst survivors 4-month post-fracture.
This work has been sponsored by an unrestricted grant of AMGEN to the Hospital del Mar Institute of Medical Investigation (IMIM).
Databáze: OpenAIRE