| Literature DB >> 27822024 |
Alice E Kane1, Sarah N Hilmer2, John Mach2, Sarah J Mitchell3, Rafael de Cabo3, Susan E Howlett1.
Abstract
The ethical, logistical, and biological complications of working with an older population of people inherently limits clinical studies of frailty. The recent development of animal models of frailty, and tools for assessing frailty in animal models provides an invaluable opportunity for frailty research. This review summarizes currently published animal models of frailty including the interleukin-10 knock-out mouse, the mouse frailty phenotype assessment tool, and the mouse clinical frailty index. It discusses both current and potential roles of these models in research into mechanisms of frailty, interventions to prevent/delay frailty, and the effect of frailty on outcomes. Finally, this review discusses some of the challenges and opportunities of translating research findings from animals to humans.Entities:
Keywords: IL-10 knock-out; frailty index; frailty phenotype; mouse models
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27822024 PMCID: PMC5089820 DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S105714
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Interv Aging ISSN: 1176-9092 Impact factor: 4.458
Animal models of frailty: details of the animal types, assessments, clinically equivalent scales, validation, interventional results, and strengths and limitations of the currently developed mouse models of frailty
| Study | Name of model | Animal details | Frailty assessment details | Clinical basis for model development | Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walston et al | IL-10 knock-out mice | Female IL-10tm/tm mice on a C57BL/6 background | N/A | Inflammation in frailty | Can be used to explore biological mechanisms of frailty | Is not a model of frailty in natural aging, and requires specific housing conditions |
| Parks et al | Mouse frailty index | Male and female C57BL/6 mice | 31 health-related variables including activity levels, hemodynamic measures, body composition, and metabolic status | Frailty index | Assesses across a variety of health parameters | Invasive procedures (eg, large blood samples), and specialized equipment |
| Whitehead et al | Mouse clinical frailty index | Male and female C57BL/6 mice | 31 “clinical” items | Frailty index | Convenient, fast, noninvasive measures | Does not include a cognitive assessment aspect |
| Graber et al | C57BL/6 neuromuscular healthspan-scoring system | Male C57BL/6 mice | Functional assessment – rotarod and grip strength | Sarcopenia in frailty | Combined score reduces individual variability within groups | Invasive procedure and time-consuming measurements |
| Liu et al | Frailty phenotype index | Male C57BL/6 mice | Rotarod, grip strength, voluntary wheel running, and derived endurance score | Frailty phenotype | Noninvasive assessments. Provides a cut-off to assess mice as frail or non-frail | Time-consuming measurements, and includes factor calculated from other factors |
Abbreviations: IL-10, interleukin-10; N/A, not applicable.
Summary of published studies using animal models of frailty to investigate mechanisms of frailty, interventions for frailty, or frailty as a factor influencing outcomes
| Area of research | Study | Frailty assessment/model | Age and sex of mice | Aims of study | Outcome/findings | Potential translation to clinical findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanisms of frailty | Parks et al | Mouse clinical frailty index | Males and females, 30 months | Changes in cardiomyocytes with frailty | Changes in cardiomyocytes more closely associated with frailty than age | Identification of potential interventional targets, influence knowledge about risk with frailty vs age |
| Walston et al, | IL-10 knock-out mice | Females, 11 months; males and females, lifelong | Role of chronic low-grade inflammation in frailty | Mouse model findings support the premise that inflammation has a role in frailty | Identification of potential interventional targets and potential biomarkers | |
| Sikkaa et al | IL-10 knock-out mice | Sex unknown, 9 months | Cardiovascular dysfunction in frailty | Mouse model findings support the premise that there is vascular stiffening and impaired cardiac function in frailty | Identification of potential interventional targets, influence knowledge about risk with frailty vs age | |
| Akki et al, | IL-10 knock-out mice | Male, 23 months; females, 22–24 months | ATP kinetics and mitochondrial degradation in SM in frailty | Mouse model findings support the premise that there is impaired ATP kinetics, and reduced mitochondrial degradation in SM in frailty | Identification of potential interventional targets, influence knowledge about risk with frailty vs age | |
| Interventions for frailty | Kane et al | Mouse clinical frailty index | Males, 18 months; males and females, 24 months | Resveratrol and calorie restriction as interventions for frailty | Resveratrol and calorie restriction delayed frailty in mice | RCT (Phase 2) of these interventions in humans |
| Graber et al | Mouse phenotype assessment | Males, 28 months | Influence of exercise on frailty | Exercise delayed frailty | RCT of exercise interventions in humans | |
| Huizer-Pajkos et al | Mouse clinical frailty index | Males, 24 months | Polypharmacy and frailty | Initial results of polypharmacy mice: no change in frailty with 2 weeks exposure | Consider frailty in RCTs of drugs, deprescribing trials | |
| Effect offrailty onoutcomes | Kane et al | Mouse clinical frailty index | Males, 19–27 months | Changing risk of acetaminophen toxicity in frailty; potential biomarkers | No increased risk of acetaminophen toxicity with frailty | Policy change to not reduce dose in frail elderly for acetaminophen |
| Langille et al | Mouse clinical frailty index | Females, 28 months | Effect of frailty on the gut microbiome | Microbiome changes with age and frailty | Suggests possible nutrition and pharmacology changes due to microbiome changes in frailty |
Abbreviations: IL-10, interkeukin-10; SM, skeletal muscle; RCT, randomized control trial; ATP, adenosine triphosphate.