Rib Fracture Mortality Calculator
Mortality Calculation
Mortality=min(2+1.5×(Ribs−1)+(Age≥80)×5+Cfactor, 25)
- Base Mortality = 2%
- Ribs = Number of rib fractures (each additional rib beyond the first increases mortality by 1.5%)
- Age Factor = 5% if Age ≥ 80, otherwise 0
- Comorbidity Factor CfactorCfactor:
- None = 0%
- Mild (1 condition) = 3%
- Moderate (COPD or CHF) = 6%
- Severe (Multiple conditions) = 10%
- The final mortality is capped at 25% to reflect realistic clinical outcomes.
Base Mortality
- Starts at 2%, based on general estimates of 2-6% mortality for elderly patients with rib fractures in recent studies.
Number of Rib Fractures
- Each additional rib fracture beyond the first increases mortality by ~1.5%.
- Based on data showing 6% mortality for 2 fractures and ~15% for 7 fractures, suggesting a gradual rather than exponential increase.
Age Factor
- If the patient is 80 years or older, an additional 5% is added.
- Studies indicate a significant increase in mortality in the 80+ age group compared to those in their 60s or 70s.
Comorbidities Factor
- Mild (1 condition): +3%
- Moderate (COPD or CHF): +6%
- Severe (Multiple serious conditions): +10%
- Based on findings that comorbidities significantly increase mortality risk in elderly trauma patients, particularly COPD and CHF, which impair respiratory recovery.
Capped Mortality
- The final estimate is capped at 25%, as studies show most in-hospital mortality rates for elderly rib fracture patients range between 10-25%, depending on severity and risk factors.
Sources
- Bulger et al. (2000): Mortality increases with rib fractures in elderly trauma patients, with each additional rib adding ~19% increased odds of death.
- Flagel et al. (2005): Elderly patients with 7 rib fractures had ~15% mortality, compared to ~6% with 2 fractures.
- Studies on geriatric trauma (2012-2023): Higher mortality in patients aged 80+, especially with comorbidities like COPD or CHF.