Literature DB >> 19245415

Cognitive impairment improves the predictive validity of the phenotype of frailty for adverse health outcomes: the three-city study.

José Alberto Avila-Funes1, Hélène Amieva, Pascale Barberger-Gateau, Mélanie Le Goff, Nadine Raoux, Karen Ritchie, Isabelle Carrière, Béatrice Tavernier, Christophe Tzourio, Luis Miguel Gutiérrez-Robledo, Jean-François Dartigues.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine whether adding cognitive impairment to frailty improves its predictive validity for adverse health outcomes.
DESIGN: Four-year longitudinal study.
SETTING: The French Three-City Study. PARTICIPANTS: Six thousand thirty community-dwelling persons aged 65 to 95. MEASUREMENTS: Frailty was defined as having at least three of the following criteria: weight loss, weakness, exhaustion, slowness, and low physical activity. Subjects meeting one or two criteria were prefrail and those meeting none as nonfrail. The lowest quartile in the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) and the Isaacs Set Test (IST) was used to identify subjects with cognitive impairment. The predictive validity of frailty for incident disability, hospitalization, dementia, and death was calculated first for frailty subgroups and then rerun after stratification according to the presence or absence of cognitive impairment.
RESULTS: Four hundred twenty-one individuals (7%) met frailty criteria. Cognitive impairment was present in 10%, 12%, and 22% of the nonfrail, prefrail, and frail subjects, respectively. Those classified as frail scored lower on the MMSE and IST than those classified as prefrail and nonfrail. After adjustment, frail persons with cognitive impairment were significantly more likely to develop disability in activities of daily living (ADLs) and instrumental ADLs over the following 4 years. The risk of incident mobility disability and hospitalization was marginally greater. Incident dementia was greater in the groups with cognitive impairment irrespective of their frailty status. Conversely, frailty was not a significant predictor of mortality.
CONCLUSION: Cognitive impairment improves the predictive validity of the operational definition of frailty, because it increases the risk of adverse health outcomes in this particular subgroup of the elderly population.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19245415     DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2008.02136.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Geriatr Soc        ISSN: 0002-8614            Impact factor:   5.562


  145 in total

1.  Frailty syndrome and all-cause mortality in demented patients: the Italian Longitudinal Study on Aging.

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Journal:  Age (Dordr)       Date:  2011-04-26

2.  Frailty criteria and cognitive performance are related: data from the FIBRA study in Ermelino Matarazzo, São Paulo, Brazil.

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3.  Searching for an operational definition of frailty: a Delphi method based consensus statement: the frailty operative definition-consensus conference project.

Authors:  Leocadio Rodríguez-Mañas; Catherine Féart; Giovanni Mann; Jose Viña; Somnath Chatterji; Wojtek Chodzko-Zajko; Magali Gonzalez-Colaço Harmand; Howard Bergman; Laure Carcaillon; Caroline Nicholson; Angelo Scuteri; Alan Sinclair; Martha Pelaez; Tischa Van der Cammen; François Beland; Jerome Bickenbach; Paul Delamarche; Luigi Ferrucci; Linda P Fried; Luis Miguel Gutiérrez-Robledo; Kenneth Rockwood; Fernando Rodríguez Artalejo; Gaetano Serviddio; Enrique Vega
Journal:  J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci       Date:  2012-04-16       Impact factor: 6.053

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Review 5.  Different models of frailty in predementia and dementia syndromes.

Authors:  F Panza; V Solfrizzi; V Frisardi; S Maggi; D Sancarlo; F Adante; G D'Onofrio; D Seripa; A Pilotto
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6.  Frailty: diagnosis and management.

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7.  Frailty and cognitive decline: links, mechanisms and future directions.

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8.  Geriatric conditions in heart failure.

Authors:  John A Dodson; Sarwat I Chaudhry
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9.  Physical frailty in late-life depression is associated with deficits in speed-dependent executive functions.

Authors:  Guy G Potter; Douglas R McQuoid; Heather E Whitson; David C Steffens
Journal:  Int J Geriatr Psychiatry       Date:  2015-08-27       Impact factor: 3.485

Review 10.  The frailty syndrome: definition and natural history.

Authors:  Qian-Li Xue
Journal:  Clin Geriatr Med       Date:  2011-02       Impact factor: 3.076

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