
Can Patient Selection Explain the Obesity Paradox in Orthopaedic Hip Surgery? An Analysis of the ACS-NSQIP Registry
Author(s) -
Joyce C. Zhang,
John Matelski,
Rajiv Gandhi,
Timothy Jackson,
David R. Urbach,
Peter Cram
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
clinical orthopaedics and related research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1528-1132
pISSN - 0009-921X
DOI - 10.1007/s11999.0000000000000218
Subject(s) - medicine , underweight , orthopedic surgery , body mass index , obesity , hip surgery , logistic regression , surgery , obesity paradox , general surgery , arthroplasty , overweight
The "obesity paradox" is a phenomenon described in prior research in which patients who are obese have been shown to have lower postoperative mortality and morbidity compared with normal-weight individuals. The paradox is that clinical experience suggests that obesity is a risk factor for difficult wound healing and adverse cardiovascular outcomes. We suspect that the obesity paradox may reflect selection bias in which only the healthiest patients who are obese are offered surgery, whereas nonobese surgical patients are comprised of both healthy and unhealthy individuals. We questioned whether the obesity paradox (decreased mortality for patients who are obese) would be present in nonurgent hip surgery in which patients can be carefully selected for surgery but absent in urgent hip surgery where patient selection is minimized.