| Literature DB >> 28396706 |
David B Hogan1, Colleen J Maxwell2, Jonathan Afilalo3, Rakesh C Arora4, Sean M Bagshaw5, Jenny Basran6, Howard Bergman7, Susan E Bronskill8, Caitlin A Carter9, Elijah Dixon10, Brenda Hemmelgarn11, Kenneth Madden12, Arnold Mitnitski13, Darryl Rolfson14, Henry T Stelfox15, Helen Tam-Tham16, Hannah Wunsch17.
Abstract
There is general agreement that frailty is a state of heightened vulnerability to stressors arising from impairments in multiple systems leading to declines in homeostatic reserve and resiliency, but unresolved issues persist about its detection, underlying pathophysiology, and relationship with aging, disability, and multimorbidity. A particularly challenging area is the relationship between frailty and hospitalization. Based on the deliberations of a 2014 Canadian expert consultation meeting and a scoping review of the relevant literature between 2005 and 2015, this discussion paper presents a review of the current state of knowledge on frailty in the acute care setting, including its prevalence and ability to both predict the occurrence and outcomes of hospitalization. The examination of the available evidence highlighted a number of specific clinical and research topics requiring additional study. We conclude with a series of consensus recommendations regarding future research priorities in this important area.Entities:
Keywords: acute care; assessment; frailty; hospitalization; outcomes
Year: 2017 PMID: 28396706 PMCID: PMC5383404 DOI: 10.5770/cgj.20.240
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can Geriatr J ISSN: 1925-8348
Detection of frailty in acute care settings—a summary of frailty measures
| Determination of frailty based on the judgment of a clinician | Use of a single physical performance measure to categorize patients | Based on a belief in a frailty phenotype; frailty defined as being present if a certain number of criteria are present (rules based) | Extension of physical frailty to include other dimensions (e.g., cognition, disability/ function, psychological state, morbidities, self-rated health, sensory deficits, social) | Assesses the accumulation of deficits predisposing to adverse outcomes; calculated as total number of items (deficits) present divided by maximum potential number | |
| 1 | 1 | 3–5 | 5–20 | 30+ | |
| “Eyeball” or “end-of-the-bed” subjective assessment;( | Chair stands; gait speed; grip strength( | Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS) criteria;( | Conselice Study of Brain Aging (CSBA) index; Edmonton Frail Scale;( | Frailty Index [FI] (various iterations)( | |
| Subjective assessments open to potential bias and concerns about reliability; can be based on multidimensional frailty assessment | Quick and easy to perform (though may require equipment); similar to physical frailty; doesn’t capture complex nature of frailty; impairments may be due to factors other than frailty; many older patients unable to complete testing | Widely use; results typically reported as frailty category membership (e.g., non-frail, pre-frail, frail) though for some instruments( | Uncertainty of which dimensions to include, how to assess and then combine them; scales utilizing different domains identify different sub-groups; with increasing item number becomes similar to frailty index | Criticized as containing too many items leading to issues with feasibility; unclear it has clinically significant advantages to simpler approaches |
Key questions about the utility and feasibility of frailty assessments in acute care settings
|
Does frailty replace or add significantly to “traditional” risk factors like age, sex, disability, disease severity, and multimorbidity or to standardized and validated risk tools in determining prognosis or facilitating care planning? In what situations or settings does frailty provide actionable information (i.e. specific and credible data that can be used to make recommendations or decisions about interventions)? Is the proposed frailty measure feasible, reliable and valid when administered to acutely ill patients in the fast-paced hospital setting (given that most instruments and frailty indices were initially developed and validated in community samples in stable health)? For acutely ill patients in the hospital, is it possible (or even desirable) to disentangle frailty from the effects of their presenting illness and its treatment? |
Research priorities for frailty and acute care
|
The relationship between frailty and the post-hospital syndrome should be explored. An interdisciplinary, intersectoral (i.e., community, acute care, long-term care) research network on frailty that meaningfully involves patients and families should be supported. |
| 1 | exp frail elderly/ (7078) |
| 2 | frail*.ti,ab. (16013) |
| 3 | exp middle aged/ (1153935) |
| 4 | middle age*.ti,ab. (45732) |
| 5 | exp aged/ (2374777) |
| 6 | aged.ti,ab. (523244) |
| 7 | exp very elderly/ (80034) |
| 8 | elder*.ti,ab. (266972) |
| 9 | seniors.ti,ab. (6830) |
| 10 | geriatric*.ti,ab. (54049) |
| 11 | gerontolog*.ti,ab. (8080) |
| 12 | (old* adj2 (age or people or person or men or women)). ti,ab. (147638) |
| 13 | or/3–12 (3439332) |
| 14 | 2 and 13 (12882) |
| 15 | 1 or 14 (15582) |
| 16 | exp hospital/ (831504) |
| 17 | exp hospitalization/ (244645) |
| 18 | hospital*.ti,ab. (1310274) |
| 19 | exp hospital patient/ (108197) |
| 20 | inpatient*.ti,ab. (110396) |
| 21 | exp emergency care/ (28077) |
| 22 | acute.ti,ab. (1198099) |
| 23 | exp emergency ward/ (80733) |
| 24 | (emergency adj2 (room* or center* or centre* or department* or ward* or care)).ti,ab. (115683) |
| 25 | or/16–24 (2819204) |
| 26 | 15 and 25 (4491) |
| 27 | (exp animal/ or nonhuman.mp.) not exp human/ [mp=title, abstract, heading word, drug trade name, original title, device manufacturer, drug manufacturer, device trade name, keyword] (5441146) |
| 28 | 26 not 27 (4486) |
| 29 | limit 28 to (english language and yr=”2005 – 2015”) (3313) |