TY - JOUR
T1 - Vitamin D use and health outcomes after surgery for hip fracture
AU - Sprague, Sheila
AU - Slobogean, Gerard P.
AU - Bogoch, Earl
AU - Petrisor, Brad
AU - Garibaldi, Alisha
AU - O'Hara, Nathan
AU - Bhandari, Mohit
AU - the FAITH Investigators
AU - Swiontkowski, Marc
AU - Devereaux, P. J.
AU - Guyatt, Gordon
AU - Heetveld, Martin J.
AU - Jeray, Kyle
AU - Liew, Susan
AU - Richardson, Martin
AU - Schemitsch, Emil H.
AU - Thabane, Lehana
AU - Tornetta, Paul
AU - Walter, Stephen D.
AU - McKay, Paula
AU - Scott, Taryn
AU - Viveiros, Helena
AU - Swinton, Marilyn
AU - Gichuru, Mark
AU - Bzovsky, Sofia
AU - Heels-Ansdell, Diane
AU - Zhou, Qi
AU - Buckingham, Lisa
AU - Van Lieshout, Esther M.M.
AU - Zielinski, Stephanie M.
AU - Eversdijk, Martin G.
AU - Den Hartog, Dennis
AU - Van Waes, Oscar J.F.
AU - Oprel, Pim
AU - Patka, Petr
N1 - Funding Information:
Dr Sprague, Dr Slobogean, Dr Bogoch, Ms Garibaldi, and Mr O’Hara have no relevant financial relationships to disclose. Dr Petrisor has received grants from Stryker. Dr Bhandari is a paid consultant for Stryker, Smith & Nephew, Am-gen, Eli Lilly, DJO Global Inc, Zimmer, and Ferring and has received grants from Stryker, Amgen, DePuy, Eli Lilly, and DJO Global Inc.
Publisher Copyright: Copyright © SLACK Incorporated.
PY - 2017/9/1
Y1 - 2017/9/1
N2 - Daily administration of vitamin D is important for maintaining bone homeostasis. The orthopedic community has shown increased interest in vitamin D supplementation and patient outcomes after fracture. The current study used data from a large hip fracture trial to determine the proportion of patients who consistently used vitamin D after hip fracture surgery and to determine whether supplementation was associated with improved health-related quality of life and reduced reoperation rates. The FAITH study is a multicenter trial of elderly patients with femoral neck fracture treated with internal fixation. The current study asked a subset of patients included in the FAITH study about vitamin D supplementation and categorized them as consistent users, inconsistent users, or nonusers. This study also evaluated whether supplementation was associated with improved quality of life and reduced reoperation rates. The final analysis included 573 patients (mean age, 74.1 years; female, 66.3%; nondisplaced fractures, 72.4%). A total of 18.7% of participants reported no use of vitamin D, 35.6% reported inconsistent use, and 45.7% reported consistent use. Adjusted analysis found that consistent supplementation was associated with a 2.42 increase of the Short Form-12 physical component score 12 months postoperatively (P=.033). However, supplementation was not associated with reduced reoperation rates (P=.386). Despite guidelines recommending vitamin D supplementation, a low proportion of elderly patients with hip fracture use vitamin D consistently, suggesting a need for additional strategies to promote compliance. This study found that the use of vitamin D was associated with a statistically significant but not clinically significant improvement in health-related quality of life after hip fracture. Further research is needed to confirm these findings.
AB - Daily administration of vitamin D is important for maintaining bone homeostasis. The orthopedic community has shown increased interest in vitamin D supplementation and patient outcomes after fracture. The current study used data from a large hip fracture trial to determine the proportion of patients who consistently used vitamin D after hip fracture surgery and to determine whether supplementation was associated with improved health-related quality of life and reduced reoperation rates. The FAITH study is a multicenter trial of elderly patients with femoral neck fracture treated with internal fixation. The current study asked a subset of patients included in the FAITH study about vitamin D supplementation and categorized them as consistent users, inconsistent users, or nonusers. This study also evaluated whether supplementation was associated with improved quality of life and reduced reoperation rates. The final analysis included 573 patients (mean age, 74.1 years; female, 66.3%; nondisplaced fractures, 72.4%). A total of 18.7% of participants reported no use of vitamin D, 35.6% reported inconsistent use, and 45.7% reported consistent use. Adjusted analysis found that consistent supplementation was associated with a 2.42 increase of the Short Form-12 physical component score 12 months postoperatively (P=.033). However, supplementation was not associated with reduced reoperation rates (P=.386). Despite guidelines recommending vitamin D supplementation, a low proportion of elderly patients with hip fracture use vitamin D consistently, suggesting a need for additional strategies to promote compliance. This study found that the use of vitamin D was associated with a statistically significant but not clinically significant improvement in health-related quality of life after hip fracture. Further research is needed to confirm these findings.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85032217613&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3928/01477447-20170907-01
DO - 10.3928/01477447-20170907-01
M3 - Article
C2 - 29039872
AN - SCOPUS:85032217613
VL - 40
SP - e868-e875
JO - Orthopedics
JF - Orthopedics
SN - 0147-7447
IS - 5
ER -