# Clinical profiles and outcomes of different therapeutic protocols in elderly patients with trochanteric fractures: a descriptive study

**Authors:** Xiang Yu, Wei Wang, Feng Zhou, Xin-Yu Cao, Hai-Jian Lu, Hong-Kui Hu, Xu Li, Bing-Li Liu, Rong-Guang Ao

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2026.1789056 · Frontiers in Medicine · 2026-02-24

## TL;DR

This study compares the outcomes of different treatments for elderly patients with hip fractures, showing how health status affects recovery and survival.

## Contribution

The study provides a detailed descriptive analysis of real-world treatment outcomes for elderly patients with trochanteric fractures.

## Key findings

- Surgical treatment (Group C) was associated with the highest one-year survival rate (95.42%).
- Home-based recuperation (Group A) had the lowest survival rate (83.95%) and highest impaired fracture healing.
- Functional recovery scores aligned with the observed survival rates across treatment groups.

## Abstract

To describe the clinical course and outcome profiles of elderly patients with trochanteric fractures, characterized by different baseline features, following different treatment pathways in clinical practice.

This single-center retrospective descriptive study consecutively enrolled 309 elderly patients with trochanteric fractures admitted between January 2021 and December 2023. Based on the actual treatment received, patients were categorized into three groups: Group A (home-based recuperation, n = 81), Group B (inpatient conservative treatment, n = 97), and Group C (inpatient surgical treatment, n = 131). The baseline characteristics, treatment-related metrics, complication profiles, and functional recovery and survival status at one-year post-injury were collected and descriptively analyzed.

Treatment selection closely matched patients’ baseline health status. Patients in Group C were younger, had fewer comorbidities, and better baseline function; conversely, Group A patients were older, more frail, and had greater functional dependency. Group B patients’ characteristics were intermediate. Complication profiles differed among the groups: Group C was predominantly associated with surgery-related complications; Group B exhibited a combination of fracture healing issues and immobilization-related medical complications; Group A was most notably characterized by impaired fracture healing. The one-year survival rate observed among patients in Group C was 95.42%, which was associated with their more favorable baseline health status. Rates of 91.75% and 83.95% were observed in Group B and Group A, respectively, reflecting the gradient in baseline frailty across groups. Functional recovery scores showed a parallel distribution.

This study delineates the distribution of outcomes following different treatment pathways in elderly intertrochanteric fracture patients with varying health statuses. It provides a crucial reference for individualized clinical decision-making and prognosis expectation management in this heterogeneous patient population.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** frail (MESH:D000073496), fracture (MESH:D050723), intertrochanteric fracture (MESH:D006620)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

28 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12971654/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12971654