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老年髋部骨折患者初次髋关节置换术后早期感染的术前危险因素分析和动态在线诺模图开发
Authors Cheng X, Liu Y, Wang W, Yan J, Lei X, Wu H, Zhang Y, Zhu Y
Received 5 October 2022
Accepted for publication 13 December 2022
Published 21 December 2022 Volume 2022:17 Pages 1873—1883
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/CIA.S392393
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single anonymous peer review
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Dr Maddalena Illario
Background: Hip arthroplasty is in increasing demand with the aging of the world population, and early infections, such as pneumonia, surgical site infection (SSI), and urinary tract infection (UTI), are uncommon but fatal complications following hip arthroplasty. This study aimed to identify preoperative risk factors independently associated with early infections following primary arthroplasty in geriatric hip fracture patients, and to develop a prediction nomogram.
Methods: Univariate and multivariate logistical analyses were performed to identify the independent risk factors for early infections, which were combined and transformed into a nomogram model. The prediction model was evaluated by using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), Hosmer–Lemeshow test, concordance index (C-index), 1000 bootstrap replications, decision curve analysis (DCA), and calibration curve.
Results: One thousand eighty-four eligible patients got included and 7 preoperative variables were identified to be independently associated with early infections, including heart disease (odds ratio (OR): 2.17; P: 0.026), cerebrovascular disease (OR: 2.25; P: 0.019), liver disease (OR: 8.99; P: < 0.001), time to surgery (OR: 1.10; P: 0.012), hematocrit ( 44.52; OR: 2.73; P: 0.047), and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (HCRP; > 78.64mg/L; OR: 3.71; P: < 0.001). For the nomogram model, AUC was 0.807 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.742– 0.873), the Hosmer-Lemeshow test demonstrated no overfitting (P = 0.522), and C-index was 0.807 (95% CI: 0.742– 0.872) with corrected value of 0.784 after 1000 bootstrapping validations. Moreover, the calibration curve and DCA exhibited the tools’ good prediction consistency and clinical practicability.
Conclusion: Heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, liver disease, time to surgery, hematocrit, PMR, and HCRP were significant preoperative predictors for early infections following primary arthroplasty in elderly hip fracture patients, and the converted nomogram model had strong discriminatory ability and translatability to clinical application.
Keywords: early infections, arthroplasty, hip fracture, geriatric, nomogram