When is postop fever a concern?
Up to half of patients develop fever early after THA/TKA. In most cases, this is a self-limited ancillary effect of cytokine release, with the temperature peaking on postop day 1-2.
Three strong predictors of a positive infectious disease workup are fever after postop day 3, with an associated 23.3-fold increased risk; multiple days of fever, with an odds ratio of 8.6; and a maximum temperature greater than 39.0 degrees Celsius, with a 2.4-fold increased risk. In this 7-year-old study, the cost of infectious disease workup per change in patient management was a hefty $8,209 (J Arthroplasty. 2010 Sep;25[6 Suppl]:43-8).
A retrospective study of nearly 125,000 THA/TKA patients in the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database has important implications for clinical surveillance for postop adverse events. Stroke occurred early, on median postop day 1. The median time of acute MI and pulmonary embolism was postop day 3, and pneumonia day 4.
The key take-home message was that the median time to DVT was postop day 6, by which point most patients had been discharged. Thus, 60% of postoperative DVTs occurred after discharge. And the time to diagnosis of DVT differed markedly by surgical procedure: The median day of diagnosis was day 5 in TKA patients, compared with day 13 for THA patients. Sixty-eight percent of urinary tract infections occurred post discharge. Sepsis occurred on median day 10 post surgery, surgical site infections on day 17 (Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2017 Dec;475[12]:2952-9).
In light of ever-shortening hospital lengths of stay, Dr. Wallace noted, the findings underscore the importance of comprehensive predischarge patient counseling.
Optimal time window for hip fracture surgery
AAOS guidelines recommend that hip fracture surgery should take place within 48 hours, assuming medical comorbidities are stabilized, because complication rates go up with longer wait times.
But that is controversial. A University of Toronto retrospective cohort study of 42,430 adults with hip fracture treated at 72 Canadian hospitals during 2009-2014 found that the inflection point was 24 hours. Among 13,731 patients whose elapsed time from hospital arrival to surgery was 24 hours or less, 30-day mortality was 5.8%, significantly less than the 6.5% rate in an equal number of propensity score–matched patients with a longer wait time.
The 90- and 365-day mortality rates in the patients who received surgery within 24 hours were 10.7% and 19.3%, both significantly lower than the 12.0% and 21.6% figures in patients with longer wait times.
For the 30-day composite outcome of death, myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism, DVT, or pneumonia, the rates were 10.1% and 12.2% – again, statistically significant and clinically meaningful. The 90- and 365-day composite outcomes followed suit (JAMA. 2017 Nov 28;318[20]:1994-2003).
But the Canadian study won’t be the final word. The ongoing international multicenter HIP ATTACK (Hip Fracture Accelerated Surgical Treatment and Care Track) trial is comparing outcomes in 3,000 patients randomized to hip fracture surgery within 6 hours versus 24 hours. Endpoints include mortality, myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism, pneumonia, stroke, sepsis, and life-threatening and major bleeding.
Dr. Wallace reported having no financial conflicts regarding her presentation.
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