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Radiographic outcomes decline linearly with increased time to surgery in distal radius fractures : A cohort analysis

Wadsten, Mats ; Christersson, Albert ; Farah-Mwais, Ana ; Tägil, Magnus LU ; Haskovec, Emma ; Engquist, Markus and Schmidt, Viktor (2025) In Journal of Hand Surgery: European Volume
Abstract

Introduction: The optimal timing for distal radial fracture fixation remains controversial. Most previous studies have dichotomized timing into early or delayed categories, potentially obscuring the true effect of delay. This study investigated surgical timing as a continuous variable to determine its influence on radiographic alignment. Methods: In a retrospective multicentre cohort study, we reviewed 691 surgically treated distal radial fractures across four Swedish hospitals. Radiographic parameters assessed included dorsal tilt (primary outcome), radial inclination, ulnar variance, intra-articular step, coronal shift and anterior apposition. Logistic regression was used to analyse overall acceptable alignment, while linear... (More)

Introduction: The optimal timing for distal radial fracture fixation remains controversial. Most previous studies have dichotomized timing into early or delayed categories, potentially obscuring the true effect of delay. This study investigated surgical timing as a continuous variable to determine its influence on radiographic alignment. Methods: In a retrospective multicentre cohort study, we reviewed 691 surgically treated distal radial fractures across four Swedish hospitals. Radiographic parameters assessed included dorsal tilt (primary outcome), radial inclination, ulnar variance, intra-articular step, coronal shift and anterior apposition. Logistic regression was used to analyse overall acceptable alignment, while linear regression was used for dorsal tilt. Models were adjusted for age and sex. Interobserver reliability was evaluated with intraclass correlation coefficients. Results: The mean patient age was 61 years, and 80% of the cohort were female. Each additional day delay to surgery increased the risk of unacceptable alignment by 6%, corresponding to a twofold risk increase with a 2 week delay. Dorsal tilt worsened linearly by approximately 0.34° per day, accumulating to nearly 5° after 2 weeks. Male sex was associated with significantly greater dorsal tilt (mean difference >2°) and reduced correction compared with females. Interclass correlation coefficients demonstrated excellent reliability for dorsal tilt (0.952) and radial inclination (0.947), and moderate reliability for ulnar variance (0.748) and coronal shift (0.611). Conclusion: A linear relationship was identified between surgical delay and declining radiographic outcomes, highlighting that each day’s delay progressively compromises fracture alignment. These findings emphasize the importance of prompt surgical intervention for distal radial fractures to achieve optimal radiographic results.

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author
; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
Delayed, distal radius fracture, outcomes, radius, surgery, timing
in
Journal of Hand Surgery: European Volume
publisher
SAGE Publications
external identifiers
  • scopus:105023506143
  • pmid:41017442
ISSN
1753-1934
DOI
10.1177/17531934251379171
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
7fb53051-8142-43b2-8661-25042c21bbbe
date added to LUP
2026-02-03 16:31:05
date last changed
2026-02-17 17:53:33
@article{7fb53051-8142-43b2-8661-25042c21bbbe,
  abstract     = {{<p>Introduction: The optimal timing for distal radial fracture fixation remains controversial. Most previous studies have dichotomized timing into early or delayed categories, potentially obscuring the true effect of delay. This study investigated surgical timing as a continuous variable to determine its influence on radiographic alignment. Methods: In a retrospective multicentre cohort study, we reviewed 691 surgically treated distal radial fractures across four Swedish hospitals. Radiographic parameters assessed included dorsal tilt (primary outcome), radial inclination, ulnar variance, intra-articular step, coronal shift and anterior apposition. Logistic regression was used to analyse overall acceptable alignment, while linear regression was used for dorsal tilt. Models were adjusted for age and sex. Interobserver reliability was evaluated with intraclass correlation coefficients. Results: The mean patient age was 61 years, and 80% of the cohort were female. Each additional day delay to surgery increased the risk of unacceptable alignment by 6%, corresponding to a twofold risk increase with a 2 week delay. Dorsal tilt worsened linearly by approximately 0.34° per day, accumulating to nearly 5° after 2 weeks. Male sex was associated with significantly greater dorsal tilt (mean difference &gt;2°) and reduced correction compared with females. Interclass correlation coefficients demonstrated excellent reliability for dorsal tilt (0.952) and radial inclination (0.947), and moderate reliability for ulnar variance (0.748) and coronal shift (0.611). Conclusion: A linear relationship was identified between surgical delay and declining radiographic outcomes, highlighting that each day’s delay progressively compromises fracture alignment. These findings emphasize the importance of prompt surgical intervention for distal radial fractures to achieve optimal radiographic results.</p>}},
  author       = {{Wadsten, Mats and Christersson, Albert and Farah-Mwais, Ana and Tägil, Magnus and Haskovec, Emma and Engquist, Markus and Schmidt, Viktor}},
  issn         = {{1753-1934}},
  keywords     = {{Delayed; distal radius fracture; outcomes; radius; surgery; timing}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{SAGE Publications}},
  series       = {{Journal of Hand Surgery: European Volume}},
  title        = {{Radiographic outcomes decline linearly with increased time to surgery in distal radius fractures : A cohort analysis}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17531934251379171}},
  doi          = {{10.1177/17531934251379171}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}