Spinal anesthesia is not safer or more effective than general anesthesia in patients who undergo surgery for hip fractures, according to a major study.
The finding, which challenges the accepted view, offers doctors and patients better information in choosing the method that’s best for them.
“The assumption of the anesthesia and surgical communities based on the literature up to the publication of this study was that if a patient could have spinal anesthesia it was probably the safer option,” said co-author Derek Dillane, associate professor and acting chair of anesthesiology and pain medicine in the University of Alberta’s Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry.
Those assumptions are being re-evaluated because they are based on older, smaller retrospective studies, which look back on patient records after surgery, Dillane said.
He and his colleagues conducted a prospective study, generally considered the most reliable method of research, in which they enrolled new patients, randomly assigned them to receive either general or spinal anesthesia, then monitored their outcomes. It’s the largest clinical trial to date on the question, involving 1,600 patients aged 50 and older at 46 American and Canadian hospitals, including 151 patients at the University of Alberta Hospital. The results were published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The team found no difference between the two types of anesthesia in the primary outcomes: death or an inability to walk three metres independently at two months following surgery. The incidence of post-operative delirium and length of hospital stay were similar in both groups. The team reported slightly smaller risks with spinal anesthesia for dying during hospitalization, developing pneumonia or being admitted to intensive care.
“Spinal anesthesia for hip fracture surgery in older adults was not superior to general anesthesia with respect to survival and recovery of ambulation at 60 days,” the researchers concluded.
Approximately 30,000 Canadians fractured their hips over the past year.
“These are typically patients who fall, either by slipping on the ice in the wintertime or slipping in the shower,” Dillane said. “For them, the ability to walk independently again is of greatest importance.”
Dillane said the results of the study will be helpful when discussing anesthesia options with patients and their families.
“The evidence isn’t as strong as we once felt for having a spinal anesthetic,” he said.
Both types of anesthesia have risks and benefits, Dillane noted. For example, it can be hard for hip fracture patients to roll onto their sides for spinal anesthesia and there is a risk of spinal bleeding if a patient is on blood thinners, while general anesthesia may worsen dementia.
“The method that we choose is always tailored towards the particular patient and that patient’s medical status,” he explained.
Dillane said large prospective trials provide valuable information that can improve the quality of patient care. He hopes the same international research team will work together to answer other important questions related to the experience patients have when undergoing surgery.
“What we’re talking about really is outcomes – short-term, intermediate and long-term outcomes – and their relationship to how anesthesia is conducted and the anesthesia drugs that we use,” he said.
The clinical trial was supported by a grant from the American Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute.
| By Gillian Rutherford
Gillian is a reporter with the University of Alberta’s Folio online magazine. The University of Alberta is a Troy Media Editorial Content Provider Partner.
The opinions expressed by our columnists and contributors are theirs alone and do not inherently or expressly reflect the views of our publication.
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