Study identification and selection
A total of 1274 relevant studies were identified according to the search strategy. However, 798 publications were excluded after checking for duplicates. Among the 476 remaining articles, 359 articles were excluded after reviewing the titles and abstracts. Then we assessed 17 studies with full texts for eligibility. Eight studies were excluded because four of them included no control groups, and others provided inadequate data. Finally, nine RCTs with a total of 1084 patients between 2003 and 2018 met our inclusion criteria, and were included in the meta-analysis13-21. The flow diagram of study selection is shown in Fig. 1.
Study Characteristics
All the included studies were written in English, which examined perioperative outcomes between hip fracture patients who receive neuraxial or general anesthesia undergoing surgical repair. There were a total of 1084 patients, whose ages were older than 49 years-old. Seven studies looked at outcomes relating to spinal anesthesia compared with general anesthesia13,14,16-19,21, one study examed outcomes for hypobaric unilateral spinal anesthesia and general anesthesia20, and the other study compared general versus neuraxial anesthesia that encompassed spinal and epidural anesthesia15. In the terms of surgery type, two studies performed arthroplasty, hip screw and intramedullary nail18,20; two studies included hemiarthroplasty only13,14, and one study performed hemiarthroplasty and Intramedullary nail16. Only one study was at a high risk of performance bias14, and the other studies were all at low risk or unclear (Fig. 2). The characteristics of the included studies is shown in Table 1.
Outcomes for meta-analysis
Delirium rate was reported in four studies with 400 patients in the neuraxial anesthesia group and 409 patients in the general anesthesia group13,15,18,21. The P value with the Cochran’s Q test was 0.03, and the I2 statistic was 66%, which indicated high heterogeneity among these studies. Thus a random effect model was used to analyze the results. The pooled data showed no significant difference in delirium rate between the two groups (OR = 1.05, 95% CI 0.27, 4.00; P = 0.95, Fig. 3)
Three studies examed blood loss during hip fracture surgery with 250 patients in the neuraxial anesthesia group and 257 patients in the general anesthesia group15,17,19. The P value with the Cochran’s Q test was 0.0003, and the I2 statistic was 88%, which indicated high heterogeneity among these studies. Thus a random effect model was used to analyze the results, showing a significant difference between the two groups in favor of the neuraxial anesthesia (MD = -137.8, 95% CI -241.49, -34.12; p = 0.009, Fig. 4). However, the adjusted p-value was 0.054 with a Bonferroni correction applied and therefore above the significant threshold of 0.05. Thus, this result was underpowered.
Three studies were included in the meta-analysis for 30-day mortality, involving 363 patients in the neuraxial anesthesia group and 389 patients in the general anesthesia group15,16,18. The P value with the Cochran’s Q test was 0.21, and the I2 statistic was 48%, which indicated low heterogeneity among these studies.Thus a fixed effect model was used to analyze the results. The pooled data revealed that there was no significant difference in 30-day mortality between the two groups (OR = 1.34, 95% CI 0.56, 3.21; P = 0.51, Fig. 5)
Acute myocardial infarction rate was reported in three studies with 363 patients in the neuraxial anesthesia group and 376 patients in the general anesthesia group15,16,18. The P value with the Cochran’s Q test was 0.96, and the I2 statistic was 0%, which indicated low heterogeneity among these studies. Thus a fixed effect model was used to analyze the results. The pooled data showed no significant difference in the acute myocardial infarction rate between the two groups (OR = 0.88, 95% CI 0.17, 4.65; P = 0.88, Fig. 6)
Two studies provided the outcome of pneumonia rate, which involved 363 patients in the neuraxial anesthesia group and 389 patients in the general anesthesia group15,18. The P value with the Cochran’s Q test was 0.42, and the I2 statistic was 0%, which indicated low heterogeneity among these studies. Thus a fixed effect model was used to analyze the results. The pooled data showed no significant difference in pneumonia rate between the two groups (OR = 1.04, 95% CI 0.23, 4.61; P = 0.96, Fig. 7)
Two studies reported length of stay in a way that could be comparable by meta-analysis, including 348 patients in the neuraxial anesthesia group and 361 patients in the general anesthesia group15,18. The P value with the Cochran’s Q test was 0.54, and the I2 statistic was 0%, which indicated low heterogeneity among these studies. Thus a fixed effect model was used to analyze the results.The pooled data revealed that no significant difference was detected in the length of stay between the two groups (MD = -0.65, 95% CI -0.32, 0.02; P =0.06, Fig. 8)
Two studies were included in the meta-analysis for deep venous thrombosis rate, involving 179 patients in the neuraxial anesthesia group and 183 patients in the general anesthesia group18,20. The P value with the Cochran’s Q test was 0.60, and the I2 statistic was 0%, which indicated low heterogeneity among these studies. Thus a fixed effect model was used to analyze the results. The pooled data revealed that there was no significant difference in deep venous thrombosis rate between the two groups (OR = 0.48, 95% CI 0.09, 2.72; P = 0.41, Fig. 9)
Sensitivity analysis
Sensitivity analyses were performed by the leave-one-out approach from the aforementioned meta-analyses. No difference was detected in the direction of the conclusions with each study removed in turn, which showed that our study had good reliability, and the results were statistically robust (Fig. 9)..
Quality of the evidence and recommendation strengths
A total of seven outcomes in this meta-analysis were evaluated using the GRADE system (Table 2). The evidence quality for each outcome was low. Therefore, we demonstrate that the overall evidence quality is low, which means that further research is likely to significantly change confidence in the effect estimate and may change the estimate.