Overlapping surgery increases risk for complications after hip surgery
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Although overlapping surgery was rare, it correlated with an increased risk for complications following hip surgery and researchers observed an association between the increased duration of overlap and the increased risk for complications, according to a study from JAMA Internal Medicine.
Bheeshma Ravi, MD, and colleagues performed a retrospective population-based study between 2009 and 2014 and identified 38,008 hip fractures and 52,869 THAs. Overall, 960 of the total hip fractures were overlapping, as were 1,560 of the THAs. Researchers defined a procedure as overlapping if it overlapped with another procedure by more than 30 minutes and performed by the same primary surgeon. The investigators matched overlapping hip fractures and nonoverlapping hip fractures by patient age, sex, surgical procedure, primary surgeon and hospital.
Results showed both overlapping hip fractures and overlapping THAs had a greater risk for a complication after matching with nonoverlapping procedures. Investigators noted a correlation between the increased duration of overlap and the increased complications risk in hip fracture procedures.
“The take-home messages of this study are the overlapping hip surgery is associated with an increased risk for complications, and that this risk increases as the duration of overlap increases,” Ravi told Healio.com/Orthopedics. – by Monica Jaramillo
Disclosures: The study was supported by the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences and received internal funding from the Marvin Tile Chair on Orthopaedic Surgery at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.