Length of hospital stay after hip fracture and short term risk of death after discharge: a total cohort study in Sweden
BMJ 2015; 350 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.h696 (Published 20 February 2015) Cite this as: BMJ 2015;350:h696- Peter Nordström, professor1,
- Yngve Gustafson, professor1,
- Karl Michaëlsson, professor2,
- Anna Nordström, associate professor3
- 1Department of Community Medicine and Rehabilitation, Geriatrics, Umeå University, SE-910 87 Umeå, Sweden
- 2Department of Surgical Sciences, Section of Orthopedics, Uppsala University, SE-751 85 Uppsala, Sweden.
- 3Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Umeå University, Umeå
- Correspondence to: P Nordström peter.nordstrom{at}germed.umu.se
- Accepted 5 January 2015
Abstract
Objective To investigate relation between inpatient length of stay after hip fracture and risk of death after hospital discharge.
Setting Population ≥50 years old living in Sweden as of 31 December 2005 with a first hip fracture the years 2006-12.
Participants 116 111 patients with an incident hip fracture from a closed nationwide cohort.
Main outcome measure Death within 30 days of hospital discharge in relation to hospital length of stay after adjustment for multiple covariates.
Results Mean inpatient length of stay after a hip fracture decreased from 14.2 days in 2006 to 11.6 days in 2012 (P<0.001). The association between length of stay and risk of death after discharge was non-linear (P<0.001), with a threshold for this non-linear effect of about 10 days. Thus, for patients with length of stay of ≤10 days (n=59 154), each 1-day reduction in length of stay increased the odds of death within 30 days of discharge by 8% in 2006 (odds ratio 1.08 (95% confidence interval 1.04 to 1.12)), which increased to16% in 2012 (odds ratio 1.16 (1.12 to 1.20)). In contrast, for patients with a length of stay of ≥11 days (n=56 957), a 1-day reduction in length of stay was not associated with an increased risk of death after discharge during any of the years of follow up.
Limitations No accurate evaluation of the underlying cause of death could be performed.
Conclusion Shorter length of stay in hospital after hip fracture is associated with increased risk of death after hospital discharge, but only among patients with length of stay of 10 days or less. This association remained robust over consecutive years.
Introduction
The number of elderly people is expected to rise rapidly in Europe and worldwide in the next 30 years.1 Increasingly large frail aging populations will pose enormous costs on healthcare systems because of the need to treat and manage conditions ranging from fractures to cardiovascular disease and mental disorders.2 Healthcare spending in the United States is projected to increase by 6% from 2012 through 2022, exceeding expected growth of the gross domestic product.3 Constraints on health service expenditure have led to the streamlining of healthcare systems in many countries, reducing the numbers of available public hospital beds and lengths of stay in hospital.4 5 Strategies to reduce length of stay include earlier discharge to care in community settings or at home, with support from home care or mobile rehabilitation units.6 An important question, however, is whether early discharge increases the risk of complications and ultimately death, since the number of adequately educated staff is lower outside the hospital setting.7 Shorter length of stay may also reduce the time available for proper rehabilitation, which may be important for regaining mobility and reducing the risk of long term sequelae after events such as fragility fractures.8
Hip fracture is the most severe and common fracture in elderly women and men; it is associated with high morbidity and mortality,9 especially in older men.10 Hip fracture has also been considered to be useful as a “tracer condition” to monitor healthcare response when designing clinical and organizational improvements in the quality and effectiveness of care for the elderly.11
In Sweden, the population aged more than 50 years increased 16% from 2006 to 2012 while the number of hospital beds decreased about 8%,12 13 necessitating shorter length of stay in hospitals. In this study, we investigated the impact of changes in length of stay after hip fracture in relation to the risk of death after hospital discharge in all Swedish citizens aged at least 50 years on 31 December 2005 and who experienced such fractures between 2006 and 2012.
Methods
Study cohort
According to national population registers, a total of 3 329 400 men and women aged 50 years or more lived in Sweden as of 31 December 2005. For the present study, we identified all patients from this closed nationwide cohort who experienced hip fracture between 1 January 2006 and 31 December 2012. No exclusion criterion was applied.
Diagnoses and other covariates of interest in the cohort
Data on diagnoses used in this study were obtained from the Swedish National Patient Register, which covers all inpatient care provided in Sweden since 1987 and all specialist outpatient visits since 2001. The register was searched to identify diagnoses made since 1997 using appropriate ICD-10 codes (international classification of diseases, 10th revision). Patients were included in our study based on diagnoses of incident hip fracture (ICD-10 codes S720 to S722) registered after 31 December 2005.
Other diagnoses were collected through the date of hospital discharge and were selected based on previously documented associations with fracture or death. These included dementia (ICD-10 F00, F01, F039) stroke (ICD-10 I63), myocardial infarction (ICD-10 I21), cancer (all diagnoses from the Swedish National Cancer Register), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (ICD-10 J44), renal failure (ICD-10 N17, N18) and diabetes (ICD-10 E10, E11). The National Patient Register has been validated in detail, with positive predictive values of 85% to 95%.14 15 16 Notably, the positive predictive value for hip fracture in this register is higher than 95%.17
We also collected information from the National Patient Register about types of operation for hip fracture and whether blood transfusions were given during hospitalization. Using the National Prescription Database, we linked use of antidepressants (Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) Classification code N06A) and neuroleptics (ATC code N05) at the time of hip fracture to each subject in the cohort. Date of death and underlying causes of death were obtained through record linkage with the National Cause of Death Register. Finally, information about civil status and highest education level at the time of hip fracture was collected from the Statistics Sweden database. All data were linked to cohort subjects using the unique personal identification number assigned to each Swedish citizen.
Statistical models
Baseline differences between two groups were tested using Student’s t test or the χ2 test for categorical variables. A Kaplan-Meier curve is presented for different categories of length of stay with the outcome of death within 30 days of discharge. To evaluate any interactions between length of stay and year of fracture for the outcome of death within 30 days of discharge, the total cohort was used after excluding those who died during hospital stay (110 248 patients remained).
A product interaction term was computed between length of stay and year of fracture. This product interaction term was added to a logistic regression model, together with all other variables according to table 2⇓ (including year of fracture and length of stay). The differences of minus twice the log-likelihood (−2lnL) for a model with the interaction term and that of the model without the interaction term is approximately χ2 distributed with degrees of freedom equal to the difference in number of estimated parameters in the models. A statistically significant interaction was assumed if the difference in −2lnL between the models was significant (P<0.05). Based on a statistically significant interaction (P<0.05), we evaluated length of stay and the risk of death for each year of follow up separately, and the risk of death for those with length of stay of ≤10 days and the rest of the cohort separately.
To test whether the increased risk of death for those with length of stay of ≤10 days compared with length of stay of ≥11 days was time dependent, we evaluated Schoenfeld’s residuals using estat phtest command (Stata software). Given that the test indicated that the proportional hazard assumption was violated (χ2 = 108.2, P<0.001), the independent association between length of stay (per day decrease) and the risk of death within 30 days of discharge was analyzed using binary logistic regression in four models. The first model was adjusted for age (continuous) and sex (male/female), the second also included civil status (four categories) and education (four categories), the third model additionally included types of hip fracture (four categories) and surgery (six categories), and the final model was extended to include comorbidities up to the date of discharge (seven categories), drug use (two categories), and blood transfusion (yes/no). The outcome for these models was death within 30 days of discharge.
To test whether the odds ratio for length of stay and risk of death was significantly different in 2006 compared with the later years, a test of heterogeneity was used (“metan” command in the Stata software), based on the odds ratio and the 95% confidence intervals.
To formally test whether the association between length of stay and death within 30 days of discharge was linear, we also included length of stay as squared term in the fully adjusted statistical model. Since this model indicated a non-linear relationship, we further evaluated this association using a proportional hazards model, restricted cubic splines with five knots (5th, 27.5th, 50th, 72.5th, and 95th centiles as suggested by Harrell).18 A length of stay of 12 days (mean length of stay in 2012) was used as the reference in these models.
In a sensitivity analysis, we evaluated the effects of categorized length of stay (≤10 v ≥11 days) on the risk of death with increasing follow-up duration, using a flexible parametric model with time dependent effects and three degrees of freedom.19
The Stata software (version 12.1; StataCorp LP, Texas, USA) and SPSS (version 21; IBM, New York, United States) were used to fit the statistical models and graphically illustrate the results.
Results
During 20.9 million person-years of observation in 3.3 million individuals at risk, 116 111 (3.5%) patients sustained a hip fracture at a mean age of 82.2 years.
Among the individuals with hip fracture, table 1⇓ shows the risk of death during hospital stay, within 30 days of admission, and within 30 days of discharge. In total 5863 patients died during hospital stay, 6377 died within 30 days of discharge, and 30052 (25.9%) died within one year after admission for fracture. Age was the overall strongest predictor of the risk of death within one year of admission (odds ratio 1.072 (95% confidence interval 1.071 to 1.074) per year).
The mean length of stay in hospital after hip fracture was 14.2 (range 0–343) days in 2006, and decreased to 11.6 (0–137) days in 2012 (P<0.001) (table 1⇑). Table 2⇓ shows the basic characteristics of the cohort for length of stay of 0–5 days, 6–10 days, 11–14 days, and ≥15 days, including patients who did not die during hospital time (n=110 248). Early discharge was associated with more femoral neck fractures and dementia.
Figure 1⇓ shows Kaplan-Meier curves for the risk of death within 30 days of discharge for categories of length of stay (n=110 248). After adjusting for all covariates according to table 2⇑ and excluding those who died during hospital stay, we found that patients with a length of stay of 1–5 days had twice the risk of death within 30 days of discharge compared with patients with a length of stay of ≥15 days (odds ratio 1.97 (95% CI 1.83 to 2.13)).
Inpatient length of stay and risk of death within 30 days of discharge
Given the observed strong interaction between length of stay and year of hip fracture with respect to the risk of death within 30 days of hospital discharge (P<0.001 for interaction in a model including all covariates), data were analyzed separately for each year. After adjustment for all covariates (according to table 2⇑) and exclusion of subjects who died before hospital discharge, a 1-day reduction in length of stay was marginally significantly associated with death within 30 days of hospital discharge in 2006 (odds ratio 1.007 (1.000 to 1.013)). Based on heterogeneity test, this association was significantly higher in 2007, 2009, 2010, and 2012 (table 3⇓).
Non-linear association between length of stay and short term mortality
However, as presented in figure 2⇓, the association between length of stay and risk of death after discharge was non-linear (P<0.001). The threshold for this non-linear effect was about 10 days. Thus, for patients with length of stay of ≤10 days, each day’s reduction in length of stay increased the risk of death within 30 days of discharge by 8% in 2006 (odds ratio 1.076 (1.033 to 1.121)). This association increased to 16% more deaths for each day’s reduction in length of stay in 2012 (odds ratio 1.164 (1.122 to 1.208), P=0.007 for interaction). In contrast, for patients with length of stay of ≥11 days, each day shorter length of stay was not associated with an increased risk of death for any year in the study period (table 4⇓).
Next, we found that a short length of stay, tested by comparing patients with a length of stay of ≤10 against patients with a length of stay of ≥11 days, was associated with an especially increased risk of death within 30 days of discharge for some subgroups (online supplemental fig 1). Highest risks were noted for men, patients with trochanteric fractures, and subjects with certain comorbidities (such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, renal failure, and cardiovascular disease).
Causes of death within 30 days of discharge
The most common underlying cause of death within 30 days of hospital discharge, according to the National Cause of Death Register, was “expos[ure] to non-specified factor - home” (ICD-10 code X590), recorded on the death certificates of 1371 (21.5%) subjects. Other common underlying causes of death were ischaemic heart disease, including myocardial infarction (845 (13.2%) subjects); any form of cancer (710 (10.0%) subjects); dementia (467 (7.2%) subjects); falls (381 (5.9%) subjects); and stroke (245 (3.7%) subjects). Other causes of death included smaller miscellaneous diagnostic groups.
Sensitivity analyses
In a first sensitivity analysis, we found that the increased risk of death after discharge associated with a short length of stay (comparing length of stay of ≤10 v ≥11 days) decreased with increasing follow-up (supplemental fig 2). Therefore, we evaluated the risk of death between 11 and 30 days of hospital admission for patients alive at day 10 and with a length of stay of ≤10 days (supplemental table). Each 1-day reduction in length of stay increased the risk of death during 11–30 days of hospital admission by 4% in 2006 (odds ratio 1.04 (95% CI 0.99 to 1.09)). This association increased to 12% more deaths for each 1-day reduction in length of stay in 2012 (odds ratio 1.12 (1.07 to 1.17), P=0.03 for interaction).
Discussion
The present study showed that a shorter length of hospital stay after hip fracture was associated with an increased risk of death within 30 days of hospital discharge in the Swedish population. This association seemed to increase over the seven years of follow-up as mean length of stay decreased by about 20%. The increased risk of death associated with short length of stay was not linear and was confined to patients with length of stay of 10 days or less throughout the study period. Our results suggest that the continuous efforts to decrease length of stay after major surgery in many countries is associated with higher mortality after hospital discharge.
Clinical implications of the results
The results may seem surprising given that length of hospital stay after a hip fracture should be adapted to the patient’s general condition and therefore not associated with death after hospital discharge. In a recent study, Kaboli and others evaluated length of stay in all medical conditions in relation to re-admission rates in all 129 Veterans Affairs hospitals in the United States during the period 1997-2010.20 Mean length of stay decreased from 5.4 to 4 days during follow-up, with a concomitant decrease in re-admission rates of 2.7%. The results show that shorter length of stay could be accompanied by improved or stable re-admission rates, especially for medical conditions where the treatment has improved, such as myocardial infarctions.21 Important differences in relation to our study include the mean age of the patients of 65 years (compared with 82 years in our study), the main exposure of medical conditions associated with a short length of stay, and the primary outcome (re-admission to hospital v mortality).
Our results are supported by a previous study that examined the association between length of stay after hip fracture and death after discharge among 492 subjects from three hospitals in Japan and two in the US.22 Mean postoperative length of stay was 5 days in the US and 34 days in Japan, and the risk of death after hospital discharge was doubled in the US in comparison with Japan. In the total cohort, a 1-day reduction in length of stay increased the risk of death after discharge by 2.6%. In our study, however, the association between length of stay and death after discharge was not linear. Thus, length of stay was not associated with the risk of death within 30 days of discharge for patients with a length of stay of at least 11 days. In contrast, for patients with length of stay of 10 days or less in 2006, each 1-day reduction in length of stay was associated with an 8% increase in the risk of death after discharge. The strength of the association increased twice during the seven years of observation. The overall reduction of length of stay during the follow-up period may have contributed to these time-dependent effects.
The mechanism underlying the increased risk of death after discharge is of interest. Strategies to reduce length of stay include early discharge to rehabilitation in community settings,6 22 which results in patients’ exposure to fewer care providers with adequate education in the early postoperative period. European and North American studies have shown that care provision by more nurses with at least bachelor’s degrees is associated with lower mortality after surgery.7 23 24 Shorter length of stay also reduces the time available for comprehensive evaluation of medical conditions during hospitalization, often referred to as comprehensive geriatric assessment. A growing body of evidence suggests that comprehensive geriatric assessment decreases the risks of complications after hip fracture25 26 and death after discharge in elderly patients.27 Elderly patients with hip fracture, who often have multiple comorbidities and high risks of complications,28 29 may be at particularly high risk. This was confirmed in the present study, as men with several different diagnoses and trochanteric fractures at baseline were at especially high risk of post-discharge death after shorter length of stay.
Limitations and strengths of the study
The present study has potential limitations. The risk of death was highest immediately after admission to hospital and, by definition, was related to fracture and inpatient hospital care. Yet, no proper evaluation of the underlying cause of death was performed in many cases, and the most common cause of death according to the National Cause of Death Register was “expos[ure] to non-specified factor.” This low accuracy may relate to the current low frequency of autopsy in Sweden.30 An evaluation of specific causes of death in this population would clearly provide important information useful for implementing measures with the aim of reducing the risk of complications and risk of death after hip fracture.
The fact that the highest rates of death occur early after a hip fracture would mean that, if length of stay decreases in a population, the risk of death after discharge would automatically increase. In the present study this could bias the association between length of stay and death during follow-up as length of stay decreased. In the final sensitivity analysis we therefore evaluated length of stay and the risk of death within 11–30 days of admission for patients with a length of stay of 10 days or fewer. The significant association between death and shorter length of stay in this model confirmed the main results of our study. None the less, given the relative short observation period (2006–12) and the closed cohort studied, the stronger association between length of stay and death after discharge during the years of follow-up should be interpreted with caution.
Finally, we lacked information about whether subjects were discharged to home or to community based living facilities such as nursing homes. It would be of interest to evaluate whether certain type of living after discharge is associated with a more favourable outcome.
Strengths of the present study include the large, well characterized, nationwide cohort of hip fracture patients; no exclusions; and the use of the individual personal registration number, rendering virtually no loss to follow-up and enabling linkage to national registries. Therefore, we had the opportunity to reduce the potential influence of a reverse causation phenomenon in our study by adjusting our estimates for comorbid conditions, medications, socioeconomic status, hip fracture subcategory, and type of surgery.
Conclusion
Shorter length of hospital stay was associated with an increased risk of death after discharge in Swedish patients with hip fractures. This increased risk was confined to patients with length of stay of 10 days or fewer. In addition to evaluation of other diagnoses than hip fractures, further research should seek to gain a better understanding of the underlying cause of the increased risk of death after discharge in surgical patients, and evaluate whether early discharge to rehabilitation centers or nursing homes is associated with a worse outcome.
What is already known on this topic
Patients’ length of stay at hospital has decreased for many conditions, including hip fractures
A shorter length of stay may influence the time for proper rehabilitation and could increase the risk for complications.
What this study adds
Shorter length of hospital stay after hip fracture was associated with an increased risk of death within 30 days of hospital discharge in the Swedish population
This increased risk was confined to patients with length of stay of 10 days or fewer
Notes
Cite this as: BMJ 2015;350:h696
Footnotes
Contributors: KM and PN contributed equally to the paper. PN conceived the idea for the study. PN compiled and analyzed the study estimates with the help and input of AN and KM. PN made initial drafts of tables and figures with input from all other authors. PN led the writing of the paper with contributions from all other authors.
Funding: The present study was funded by the Swedish research council. The researchers conducted this study totally independent of the funding bodies.
Competing interests: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form at www.icmje.org/coi_disclosure.pdf and declare: no support from any organisation for the submitted work; no financial relationships with any organisations that might have an interest in the submitted work in the previous three years; no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work.
Ethical considerations: This study was approved by the regional ethics board in Umeå and by the National Board of Health and Welfare in Sweden.
Data sharing: No additional data available.
Transparency: The lead author (the manuscript’s guarantor) affirms that the manuscript is an honest, accurate, and transparent account of the study being reported; that no important aspects of the study have been omitted; and that any discrepancies from the study as planned (and, if relevant, registered) have been explained.
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