Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Society faces a major challenge with the management of the health and socio-economic burden caused by acute physical stress in the older population (>75 years). In particular, hip fracture (HF) represents a major health care preoccupation, affecting 1.6 M patients worldwide, resulting in a significant drop of life quality and autonomy. Nowadays, this trauma is still associated with a poor outcome of 20-30% one-year mortality in the elderly. This emphasizes the value of assessing biological factors that may predict clinical outcome after HF. The preliminary work pinpoints a central role of neopterin in loss of autonomy and death. Using HF as an acute stress model that accelerates the progressive course of aging, the aim is to validate neopterin as a predictive biomarker of pernicious clinical outcomes.


Clinical Trial Description

Hip fracture (HF) is a common condition affecting an estimated 2 million older people worldwide and that number is increasing by 25% each decade as the population continues to grow. HF has serious clinical consequences due to the associated morbidity, the loss of autonomy in individuals generally autonomous before the event. HF has also been shown to be an independent predictor of a new admission to long-term care, representing an unfavorable outcome with annual costs of four billion in the United States alone. Among the avenues aimed at improving the management of HF, the deployment of perioperative geriatric units (UPOG) has improved the prognosis of patients but their implantations are still unfortunately too marginal. It is therefore in the identification of patients most at risk that research must be focused in order to identify the most vulnerable and target interventions. Today, the decision of admission is made early in the course of care, as soon as their arrival to emergencies, and involves discussion between orthopedist, anesthesiologist and geriatrician. This decision is based on criteria that are still very logistical (place or not), clinical (comorbidities, fragility, severity, etc.) but lacks objective information (no predictive signatures) on resilience post HF. In this context, prognostic biomarkers would have an important role to play in guiding clinicians. The investigators team has shown that neopterin is a biomarker of inflammation and activation of the immune system secreted during HF and whose increased rate has been associated with mortality at one year post HF as well as with functional recovery on D30 after surgery. The investigators hypothesize that the neopterin measured at the admission of the elderly patient to the emergency ward for HF could improve the prediction of the resumption of walking without major loss of autonomy at D30 after surgery. The main objective of the study is to assess whether the plasma neopterin concentration can predict the resumption of walking on D30 after surgery, in elderly patients who have undergone surgery as part of a HF. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05233072
Study type Interventional
Source Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
Contact Jacques BODDAERT, MD
Phone +331 42 16 03 12
Email jacques.boddaert@aphp.fr
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date May 16, 2022
Completion date December 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Withdrawn NCT00307905 - TRAUMEEL for Pain After Fracture of Neck of Femur Phase 3
Recruiting NCT04017403 - Probiotics Attenuate Postoperative Cognition Decline N/A