Systematic review and meta-analysis on radiographic hip morphometry and fracture patterns
This is a systematic review with meta-analysis of 4184 patients with unilateral proximal femoral fractures. The review synthesized evidence on associations between proximal femoral and hip joint morphometry, measured on standard anteroposterior radiographs, and hip fracture patterns. The primary focus was comparing intracapsular fractures with intertrochanteric and extracapsular patterns.
Key findings include that intertrochanteric fractures were significantly associated with a smaller femoral head diameter (p < 0.001) and increased medial neck cortex thickness (p = 0.021) compared with intracapsular fractures. Extracapsular fractures demonstrated a longer femoral neck axis length (p = 0.012), increased horizontal offset (p = 0.048), smaller absolute offset (p = 0.026), and a shorter hip axis length (p = 0.026) compared with intracapsular fractures. Both intertrochanteric and extracapsular fractures exhibited significantly lower neck-shaft angles (p < 0.001) and higher Wiberg angles (p < 0.001) than the intracapsular group.
The authors acknowledge a key limitation: the relative contribution of individual geometric parameters remains incompletely defined. The review did not report safety data, as it was not applicable to this synthesis of observational associations.
Practice relevance is restrained; the authors suggest simple linear and angular measurements from standard radiographs may assist in fracture pattern stratification, risk assessment, and preoperative planning in elderly patients. The certainty note indicates a random-effects model was used for the meta-analysis.