Orthogeriatric hip fractures have high morbidity and mortality rates. Modern management focuses on multidisciplinary collaboration for prompt surgical stabilization, early mobilization with multimodal pain control to avoid opioid consumption, and an enhanced recovery pathway. Despite these advances, postoperative complications and mortality rates remain higher than age-matched control subjects. The authors of this article represent the orthopaedic, anesthesia, and hospitalist medicine members of a multidisciplinary team at a single, Level 1 trauma center. Our goal was to provide an up-to-date comprehensive review of orthogeriatric hip fracture perioperative management from a multidisciplinary perspective that every orthopaedic surgeon should know.
Improved life expectancy and activity levels in the elderly means the number of geriatric hip fractures requiring surgery are increasing. Changing population demographics predict that by 2040 1 in 4 Europeans and 1 in 5 North Americans will be older than 65 years. 1 Despite care advancements, geriatric hip fractures are a common cause of morbidity and mortality and a notable source of costs to healthcare systems. Updated information suggests that the average geriatric femur fracture spends 5.8 days inpatient and costs around $16,423 in the United States. In addition, patients with femur fracture have a 10% chance of death in the first 30 days and 8% to 36% up to a year after repair. 2,3 Higher mortality rates persist for geriatric hip fractures versus age and comorbidity-matched cohorts as long as 10 years after fracture. 1 Geriatric hip fractures are best served by an orthogeriatric approach with a multidisciplinary care team. They have a greater number of comorbid conditions than other surgical patients. Perioperative risk is affected by timing of surgery. Time to surgery beyond 24-48 hours from injury is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. [4][5][6] This creates a dilemma wherein patient risk factors and perisurgical evaluation and optimization must be balanced with avoidance of unnecessary delays to surgery. Integrating a dedicated geriatric femur fracture perioperative care pathway with a surgical and medicine comanagement model is an invaluable solution. [7][8][9] Members of a comanagement team can include representatives from orthopaedics, anesthesia, medicine/geriatrics, rehab therapy, and nursing coordinators. Comanagement should focus on coeducation between specialists; evidence-based standardization of care