Assessment of Complication Risk in the Treatment of Proximal Humerus Fractures: A Retrospective Analysis of 4019 Patients

Henkelmann, Ralf; Hepp, Pierre; Mester, Bastian; Dudda, Marcel; Braun, Philipp-Johannes; Kleen, Sebastian; Zellner, Johannes; Galler, Michael; Koenigshausen, Matthias; Schildhauer, Thomas A.; Saier, Tim; Trulson, Inga; Dey Hazra Rony-Oijit; Lill, Helmut; Glaab, Richard; Wagner, Marcus; Bolt, Basil; Katthagen, Jan Christoph; Raschke, Michael J.

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

(1) Background: The treatment of proximal humeral fractures (PHFs) is debated controversially. Current clinical knowledge is mainly based on small single-center cohorts. The goal of this study was to evaluate the predictability of risk factors for complications after the treatment of a PHF in a large clinical cohort in a multicentric setting. (2) Methods: Clinical data of 4019 patients with PHFs were retrospectively collected from 9 participating hospitals. Risk factors for local complications of the affected shoulder were assessed using bi- and multivariate analyses. (3) Results: Fracture complexity with n = 3 or more fragments, cigarette smoking, age over 65 years, and female sex were identified as predictable individual risk factors for local complications after surgical therapy as well as the combination of female sex and smoking and the combination of age 65 years or older and ASA class 2 or higher. (4) Conclusion: Humeral head preserving reconstructive surgical therapy should critically be evaluated for patients with the risk factors abovementioned.

Details about the publication

JournalJournal of Clinical Medicine (J Clin Med)
Volume12
Issue5
StatusPublished
Release year2023 (25/02/2023)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.3390/jcm12051844
Keywordsproximal humeral fracture; complication; operative treatment; nonoperative treatment; risk analysis

Authors from the University of Münster

Katthagen, Jan Christoph
Clinic for Accident, Hand- and Reconstructive Surgery
Raschke, Michael Johannes
Clinic for Accident, Hand- and Reconstructive Surgery