# Prediction of Osteoporotic Hip Fracture Outcome: Comparative Accuracy of 27 Immune–Inflammatory–Metabolic Markers and Related Conceptual Issues

**Authors:** Alexander Fisher, Leon Fisher, Wichat Srikusalanukul

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm13133969 · Journal of Clinical Medicine · 2024-07-07

## TL;DR

This study compares 27 immune-inflammation-metabolism markers to predict outcomes in hip fracture patients, finding several simple and cost-effective indicators for heart injury and hospital death.

## Contribution

The study identifies the most accurate immune-inflammation-metabolism markers for predicting postoperative myocardial injury and in-hospital death in hip fracture patients.

## Key findings

- Ten IIM biomarkers were significantly associated with postoperative myocardial injury.
- Sixteen IIM biomarkers were indicative of a fatal outcome in hip fracture patients.
- Anaemia and specific cell ratio thresholds were among the strongest predictors for PMI and in-hospital death.

## Abstract

Objectives: This study, based on the concept of immuno-inflammatory–metabolic (IIM) dysregulation, investigated and compared the prognostic impact of 27 indices at admission for prediction of postoperative myocardial injury (PMI) and/or hospital death in hip fracture (HF) patients. Methods: In consecutive HF patient (n = 1273, mean age 82.9 ± 8.7 years, 73.5% females) demographics, medical history, laboratory parameters, and outcomes were recorded prospectively. Multiple logistic regression and receiver-operating characteristic analyses (the area under the curve, AUC) were used to establish the predictive role for each biomarker. Results: Among 27 IIM biomarkers, 10 indices were significantly associated with development of PMI and 16 were indicative of a fatal outcome; in the subset of patients aged >80 years with ischaemic heart disease (IHD, the highest risk group: 90.2% of all deaths), the corresponding figures were 26 and 20. In the latter group, the five strongest preoperative predictors for PMI were anaemia (AUC 0.7879), monocyte/eosinophil ratio > 13.0 (AUC 0.7814), neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio > 7.5 (AUC 0.7784), eosinophil count < 1.1 × 109/L (AUC 0.7780), and neutrophil/albumin × 10 > 2.4 (AUC 0.7732); additionally, sensitivity was 83.1–75.4% and specificity was 82.1–75.0%. The highest predictors of in-hospital death were platelet/lymphocyte ratio > 280.0 (AUC 0.8390), lymphocyte/monocyte ratio < 1.1 (AUC 0.8375), albumin < 33 g/L (AUC 0.7889), red cell distribution width > 14.5% (AUC 0.7739), and anaemia (AUC 0.7604), sensitivity 88.2% and above, and specificity 85.1–79.3%. Internal validation confirmed the predictive value of the models. Conclusions: Comparison of 27 IIM indices in HF patients identified several simple, widely available, and inexpensive parameters highly predictive for PMI and/or in-hospital death. The applicability of IIM biomarkers to diagnose and predict risks for chronic diseases, including OP/OF, in the preclinical stages is discussed.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** ischaemic heart disease (MONDO:0024644)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** IIM (MESH:D000163), chronic diseases (MESH:D002908), death (MESH:D003643), IHD (MESH:D006331), HF (MESH:D006620), anaemia (MESH:D000743), Osteoporotic Hip Fracture (MESH:D058866), myocardial injury (MESH:D009202), PMI (MESH:D019106), Metabolic (MESH:D008659)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

483 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11242639/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11242639