AI Article Synopsis

  • Hip fractures primarily impact older adults, leading to increased health complications and risks, prompting a review of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) during their surgical recovery.
  • The systematic review followed PRISMA guidelines, analyzing various studies on NSAIDs' effectiveness and safety in post-operative outcomes like pain control and complications after hip fracture surgery.
  • Although some studies supported NSAIDs for pain management, findings on safety were inconsistent, indicating a need for more research to clarify the overall benefits and risks of using NSAIDs in these patients.*

Article Abstract

Background: Hip fracture (HF) mostly affects older adults and is responsible for increased morbidity and mortality. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are part of the peri-operative multimodal analgesic management, but their use could be associated with adverse events in older adults. This systematic review aimed to assess outcomes associated with NSAIDs use in the peri-operative period of HF surgery.

Methods: This systematic review was conducted according to the PRISMA guidelines. Three databases (PubMed/EMBASE/Cochrane Central) were used to search for clinical trials and observational studies assessing efficacy, safety and impact of NSAIDs use on non-specific post-operative outcomes, such as functional status and post-operative complications.

Results: Among the 1320 references initially identified, four provided data on efficacy, four on safety and six on non-specific post-operative outcomes (three randomized controlled clinical trials, three observational studies). Mean study population ages ranged from 68 to 87 years. Two studies found that NSAIDs were effective on pain control, but two studies found conflicting results on opioid sparing. No increased risk of acute kidney injury was observed, while results concerning bleeding risk and delirium were conflicting. No study has found any effect of NSAIDs use on walk recovery. Quality of evidence was high for pain control, but low to very low for all the other studied outcomes.

Conclusions: The use of NSAIDs may be effective for pain control in the peri-operative period of HF surgery. However, safety data were conflicting with low levels of certainty. Further studies are needed to assess their benefit-risk balance in this context. The research protocol was previously registered on PROSPERO (registration number: CRD42021237649).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40266-023-01074-wDOI Listing

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