New clinical trial to determine most effective treatment for common hip fracture in older adults
February 10th, 2025 • Karen Warmkessel
Hip fractures in older adults can lead to serious complications, disability and even death. Traditionally, orthopedic surgeons have repaired a common fracture of the upper part of the thigh bone, or femur, near the hip using screws and plates to piece together slightly separated pieces of bone. But many surgeons now treat these "minimally displaced" femoral neck fractures by replacing the hip joint with a metal implant.
The "FASTER-Hip trial," a new multicenter clinical trial co-led by Gerard Slobogean, MD, MPH, an Associate Professor of Orthopedics and Director of Clinical Research in the Department of Orthopedics at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM), will determine if hip replacement surgery, also known as hip arthroplasty, produces better outcomes for patients ages 60 and older than simpler "internal fixation" that has been performed for decades.
"Our goal is to improve patient outcomes after often debilitating hip fractures, especially among older adults," said Dr. Slobogean, who is also an orthopedic trauma surgeon at the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center at the University of Maryland Medical Center (UMMC).
"Hip fractures are a major public health concern, and we anticipate that the results of this trial will definitively inform clinical practice, regardless of the result."
Each year, more than 5 million older adults around the world sustain hip fractures. Femoral neck fractures are very common, and one in five of those fractures are considered minimally displaced, with a small gap between the edges of the broken bone. About 14% of those who receive internal fixation surgery ultimately need to have another surgery, such as a hip replacement.
"We want to answer the question, 'When an older adult has this type of broken hip, does fixing the fracture or replacing the hip best reduce death, maintain their ability to walk, increase their time at home and improve their overall health?'" Dr. Slobogean said. "Currently, we have limited clinical research to help patients, caregivers and orthopedic surgeons choose the best treatment for each patient."
Researchers expect to open the randomized controlled clinical trial in the fall. They plan to enroll 600 patients aged 60 or older who need surgery for minimally displaced femoral neck fractures at 32 tertiary care and community hospitals in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Spain, the Netherlands and Norway.
The R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center—the highest-level trauma center in Maryland—will be one of the sites. Patients will be randomly selected to receive either internal fixation or hip replacement surgery and investigators will follow them for 12 months.
Joseph Patterson, MD, an orthopedic surgeon specializing in fracture care, Director of Orthopedic Trauma research in the Department of Orthopedic Surgery and Assistant Professor at the Keck School of Medicine at USC, is the principal investigator. Dr. Slobogean and Sheila Sprague, Ph.D., Research Director in the Department of Surgery at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada, are co-principal investigators.
"Hip fractures among older adults is a significant public health concern, with up to 30 percent of people dying within the first year and others enduring traumatic loss of function and ability to lead productive lives," said Mark T. Gladwin, MD, the John Z. and Akiko K. Bowers, Distinguished Professor and Dean of UMSOM, and Vice President for Medical Affairs at University of Maryland, Baltimore.
"Evidence from head-to-head clinical trials will help surgeons advise patients on whether to choose an immediate hip replacement, which is more time-consuming and involves more blood loss, or an internal fixation procedure that may require another surgery later."
UMSOM researchers were instrumental in developing the clinical trial. This will be the first clinical trial designed as a Musculoskeletal Adaptive Platform Trial (MAPT) utilizing a model developed by the University of Maryland's Center of Orthopedic Injury Research, according to Nathan O'Hara, Ph.D., MHA, an Associate Professor of Orthopedics at UMSOM who serves as COIRI's co-director with Dr. Slobogean.
A platform trial is a type of clinical trial that allows multiple treatments to be tested simultaneously within a single trial structure—an approach that reduces costs, speeds up the evaluation process and improves decision-making in assessing therapies.
The trial was designed and will be conducted with input from orthopedic trauma patients, caregivers and families, orthopedic surgeons, physical therapists, geriatric medicine doctors, nurses and other health care providers, as well as professional organizations, a peer support network and a large Medicare advantage plan.
Provided by University of Maryland School of Medicine