Tracking

Friday 29 January 2021

WUTH publication: Coronavirus infection in hip fractures (CHIP) study

Citation: The bone & joint journal. 2021 Jan 28. Online ahead of print.
Author: Aatif Mahmood, Fatima Rashid, Richard Limb, Thomas Cash, Mathias Thomas Nagy, Nasri Zreik, Gautam Reddy, Ibrahim Jaly, Mohammed As-Sultany, Yuen Ting Carol Chan, Graeme Wilson, W J Harrison
Abstract: Aims: Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, incidence of hip fracture has not changed. Evidence has shown increased mortality rates associated with COVID-19 infection. However, little is known about the outcomes of COVID-19 negative patients in a pandemic environment. In addition, the impact of vitamin D levels on mortality in COVID-19 hip fracture patients has yet to be determined.

Methods: This multicentre observational study included 1,633 patients who sustained a hip fracture across nine hospital trusts in North West England. Data were collected for three months from March 2020 and for the same period in 2019. Patients were matched by Nottingham Hip Fracture Score (NHFS), hospital, and fracture type. We looked at the mortality outcomes of COVID-19 positive and COVID-19 negative patients sustaining a hip fracture. We also looked to see if Vitamin D levels had an impact on mortality.

Results: The demographics of the 2019 and 2020 groups were similar, with a slight increase in proportion of male patients in the 2020 group. The 30-day mortality was 35.6% in COVID-19 positive patients and 7.8% in the COVID-19 negative patients. There was a potential association of decreasing vitamin D levels and increasing mortality rates for COVID-19 positive patients although our findings did not reach statistical significance.

Conclusion: In 2020 there was a significant increase in 30-day mortality rates of patients who were COVID-19 positive but not of patients who were COVID-19 negative. Low levels of vitamin D may be associated with high mortality rates in COVID-19 positive patients.

Keywords: COVID-19; Hip fracture; Vitamin D.

Link to PubMed record