| Literature DB >> 28676896 |
John Muscedere1,2, Braden Waters3, Aditya Varambally4, Sean M Bagshaw5, J Gordon Boyd6, David Maslove6, Stephanie Sibley6, Kenneth Rockwood7.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Functional status and chronic health status are important baseline characteristics of critically ill patients. The assessment of frailty on admission to the intensive care unit (ICU) may provide objective, prognostic information on baseline health. To determine the impact of frailty on the outcome of critically ill patients, we performed a systematic review and meta-analysis comparing clinical outcomes in frail and non-frail patients admitted to ICU.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical frailty scale; Critically ill; Frail elderly; Frailty; Frailty index; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28676896 PMCID: PMC5501903 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-017-4867-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Characteristics of included studies
| Reference | Study design | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | Cohort size | Age | Frailty scale(s) used and how determined | Modification of scale(s) (Y/N) training for assessors (Y/N) | Frailty definition | Number frail/non-frail | Outcomes assessed | Outcomes reported by frailty severity (Y/N) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Bagshaw [ | Prospective observational multicenter cohort study in 6 Canadian ICUs | Age >50 years | ICU stay <24 h | 421 | 67 (10) years | CFS (9 point) | No | CFS > 4 | Frail: 138 (33) | Mortality, morbidity, health service utilization, AEs, QoL, discharge disposition | Yes |
| Brummel [ | Prospective observational multicenter study in 5 ICUs in the USA | Age ≥18 | Organ dysfunction for >72 h | 1040 | 62 (53–72) years | CFS (7 point) | No | CFS > 4 | Frail: 307 (30) | Mortality, morbidity, health service utilization, AEs, QoL, discharge disposition | Yes |
| Fisher [ | Prospective observational feasibility study in an Australian ICU | All patients admitted to ICU over 3 months | Anticipated death within 24 h | 205 | 60 (17.4) years | CFS (9 point) | No | CFS > 4 | Frail: 28 (14) | Mortality, health service utilization, discharge to rehab | Yes |
| Heyland [ | Prospective observational multicenter study in 24 Canadian ICUs | Age ≥80 years | Non-Canadian residents | 610 | 84 (3) years | CFS (7 point) | Yes | CFS > 4 | Frail: | Mortality, morbidity, health service utilization, QoL, discharge disposition | Yes |
| Hope [ | Prospective observational single-center study in the USA | Critically ill adult patients | NR | 84 | 57.4 (18.6) years | CFS | Yes | CFS N/R | Frail: | Mortality, health service utilization | No |
| Hope [ | Prospective observational cohort study in two centers in the USA | Age ≥18 years | ICU stay expected <24 h | 95 | 57.1 (17.5) years | CFS (9 point) | No | CFS > 4 | Frail: CFS: 34 (36) | Mortality, morbidity, health service utilization | Yes |
| Kizilarslanoglu [ | Prospective observational single-center study of patients in a medical ICU in Turkey | Age >60 years | Inability to evaluate functional, physical, and mental status prior to ICU | 122 | 71 (range 60–101) years | FI (55 item) from CGA | No | FI > 0.4 | Frail: 26 (21) | Mortality, morbidity, health service utilization | Yes |
| Le Maguet [ | Prospective observational multicenter study in 4 French ICUs | Age >65 years | No surrogates and patient could not be interviewed | 196 | 75 (6) years | FP | No | FP > 2 | Frail: | Mortality, morbidity, health service utilization | Yes |
| Mueller [ | Prospective observational study in two surgical ICUs at 1 center in the USA | Age >18 years | Patients from nursing homes | 102 | 61.9 (15.8) years | FI (50 item) | No | FI > 0.25 | Frail: 39 (38) | Mortality, morbidity, health service utilization | No |
| Zeng [ | Prospective observational study in a geriatric ICU in China | Age >65 years | None reported | 155 | 82.7 (7.1) years | FI (52 items) | Yes | FI > 0.22 | Frail: 93 (60) | Mortality | Yes |
ICU intensive care unit, SD standard deviation, IQR interquartile range, QoL quality of life, CFS clinical frailty scale, FI frailty index, pt. patient, LOS length of stay, FAT-ICU frailty assessment tool for intensive care unit (FAT-ICU), APACHE acute and chronic health evaluation, SAPS simplified acute physiology score, FP frailty phenotype
Frailty outcomes in included studies
| Reference | Hospital mortality | ICU mortality | Hospital LOS | ICU LOS | 6-month mortality | 12-month mortality | Hospital re-admission | Patients having adverse events | Discharge disposition | 12-month quality of lifea |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| Mean (SD) or median (IQR) days | Mean (IQR) or median (IQR) days) |
|
| (%) |
|
| Mean (SD) | |
| Bagshaw [ | Frail: 44 (31.9) | Frail: 16 (11.6) | Frail: 30 (10–64) | Frail: 7 (4–13) | N/R | Frail: 45 (32.6) | Frail: 51/91 (56) | Frail: 54 (39.1) | Home independently: | EQ VAS ( |
| Brummel [ | Frail: 84 (27%) | Frail: 65 (21%) | Frail: 10.0 (6.0–17.1) | Frail: 5.4 (2.9–11.1) | N/R | Frail: 165 (53.7) | N/R | N/R | N/R | SF-36 ( |
| Fisher [ | Frail: 4 (14.3) | Frail: 1 (3.6) | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | Rehabilitation: | N/R |
| Heylandb [ | Frail: 63 (33) | Frail: 29 (15) | Frail: 21 (11–48) | Frail: 6 (4–10) | N/R | Frail: 106 (55) | N/R | N/R | Home: | NR |
| Hopeb [ | Frail: 11 (32.4) | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R |
| Hopeb [ | Frail: 11 (32.4) | N/R | Frail: 29.1 (19.9)) | N/R | Frail: 15 (44.1) | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R |
| Kizilarslanoglub [ | Frail: 19 (73.1) | Frail: 18 (69.2) | N/R | N/R | Frail: 22 (84.6) | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R |
| Le Maguetb [ | FP frail: 29 (36) | FP frail: 22 (28) | FP frail: 21 (13–42) | FP frail: 7 (4–14) | FP frail: 23 (29) | N/R | NR | NR | Home: | N/R |
| Mueller [ | Frail: 5 (13) | N/R | Frail: 14.6 (11.7) | Frail: 6.1 (6.2) | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | Home: | N/R |
| Zeng [ | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R | N/R |
ICU intensive care unit, QoL quality of life, CFS clinical frailty scale, pt. patient, LOS length of stay, N/R not reported or not available, EQ VAS EuroQol visual analogue scale, SF-36 short form 36 item, mental and physical components
aQuality of life as reported in the study
bOutcomes reported are based on the CFS
Summary of frailty instruments used in the included studies
| Instrument | Description | Characteristics of tool | Definition of frailty | Validationa | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical frailty scale (CFS) [ | Nine-point scale based on subjective assessment of functional status | Scale ranges from very fit (CFS = 1) to very severely frail (CFS = 8) and terminally ill (CFS = 9). Examples: very fit people are robust, active, energetic, and motivated while very severely frail is defined as someone who is completely dependent, approaching end of life | Usually CFS ≥ 4 | Yes | Scale is simple and easy to use. It can be used by a variety of healthcare professionals |
| Frailty index (FI) [ | Deficit model of frailty assessment where the degree of frailty is calculated by dividing the total deficits by the total number items assessed | Usually 30–70 items are assessed. Any item can be included in the index as long as it meets the following criteria: | Usually | Yes | Often based on a comprehensive geriatric assessment including cognition, functional status, and co-morbid illnesses. Large number of items included can be challenging for its routine use, although it can be imbedded in clinical systems to make use of existing data |
| Frailty phenotype (FP) [ | Frailty tool based on the presence of physical phenotypic features | Calculated by the number of phenotypic features present: | Usually | Yes | Focused on objective and self-reported criteria for physical function. No assessment of cognition |
aScale validated to correlate with risk of adverse events, adverse outcomes from medical interventions, need for hospitalization, need for institutionalization and death in non-ICU populations
Fig. 1Prevalence of frailty in the included studies using all measures of frailty
Assessment of study quality using the Newcastle-Ottawa quality assessment scale for cohort studies
| Selection | Comparability | Outcome | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cohort is representative of a general adult ICU populationa | Determination of frailty was applied uniformlyb | Ascertainment of exposure | Demonstration | Comparability of cohorts on the basis of the design or analysisd | Outcome assessment | Follow-up long enough for outcome to occur | Adequacy of follow-up of cohorts | ||
| Study controls for age | Co-founders controlled | ||||||||
| Bagshaw [ | – | – | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | |
| Fisher [ | – | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | – | – | ✩ | ✩ | |
| Brummel [ | – | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ||
| Heyland [ | – | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | |
| Hope [ | – | – | ✩ | – | – | ✩ | ✩ | ||
| Hope [ | – | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | |||
| Kizilarslanoglu [ | – | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | – |
| Le Maguet [ | – | – | ✩ | ✩ | – | – | ✩ | ✩ | |
| Mueller [ | – | ✩ | ✩ | – | – | ✩ | ✩ | – | |
| Zeng [ | – | ✩ | ✩ | ✩ | – | ✩ | – | ||
aStudies did not receive a point if there were age restrictions, the study only considered a specialized ICU population, consecutive patients were not enrolled, or a large number of patients were missed
bStudies did not receive a point if the determination of frailty for individual patients was based on different interview sources such as the patient or a proxy
cAll studies received a point since the primary outcome was hospital mortality
dStudies received points if baseline factors such as age, co-morbidities, and severity of illness were accounted for in statistical models with hospital mortality as the dependent variable
Fig. 2Forest plot of the risk ratio for hospital and long-term mortality (>6 months) in frail and non-frail patients using all measures of frailty
Fig. 3Forest plot of the risk ratio for discharge home in frail and non-frail patients
Fig. 4Forest plot of the risk ratio for hospital mortality in frail and non-frail patients categorized according to the measure of frailty used
Adjusted outcomes reported in the included studies
| Study | Adjusted outcome(s) reported | Method and co-variates adjusted | Association of frailty with adjusted outcomea | Incremental value of frailty for predicting outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bagshaw [ | 1-year mortality | Multiple models adjusted for combinations of age, sex, Elixhauser score, APACHE II, SOFA, hospital type | Mortality: | Yes: frailty as defined by the CFS was associated with increased mortality at 1 year |
| Brummel [ | Hospital mortality | Adjustment for age, sex, education, comorbidity, ADL, baseline IQCODE, SOFA, CAM-ICU, RASS of −4 or −5, days of severe sepsis, days of MV, daily sedative and opiate doses | Mortality: | Yes: frailty as defined by the CFS was associated with increased mortality, increased IADL disability, and reduced SF-36 physical at 3 months and 1 year |
| Fisher [ | Hospital length of stay | Adjustment for severity of illness severity and requirement for palliative care | Hospital LOS (days): 0.1 ± 0.05, | No: frailty as defined by the CFS was not associated with clinically significant increases in hospital or ICU LOS |
| Hope [ | Adjusted outcomes not reported | |||
| Heyland [ | Physical recovery | Multivariate model: adjustment for age, sex, APACHE II, admission diagnosis, ICU diagnosis, baseline physical function, co-morbidity, IQCODE, family preferences | Physical recovery: | Yes: increasing frailty as measured by the FI was associated with reduced physical recovery and reduced survival at 1 year |
| Hope [ | Increased disability at hospital discharge | Multivariate model: adjustment for age, receipt of MV | Increased disability at hospital discharge: | Yes: frailty as measured by a CFS >4 or a FP >2 was associated with increased disability at hospital discharge or the composite of death/disability at 1 year |
| Kizilarslanoglu [ | ICU mortality | Multivariate model: adjustment for age, ICU LOS, SOFA, APACHE II | Mortality: | Yes: frailty as measured by FI was associated with increased ICU mortality |
| Le Maguet [ | ICU mortality | Multivariate model: adjustment for sex, brain injury, cardiac arrest, SAPS II, GCS, memory disorders, severe sepsis, septic shock, dialysis, treatment with corticosteroids, BMI, and vasopressor use | Mortality: | Yes: frailty values as measured by the FP and CFS were associated with increased ICU and 6-month mortality, respectively |
| Mueller [ | Adverse discharge disposition | Multivariate models: adjustment for age, APACHE II, co-morbidity, serum creatinine, hemoglobin level, GCS | Adverse discharge disposition: | Yes: frailty as measured by an FI > 0.25 was associated with increased risk of adverse discharge disposition and increased ICU/hospital LOS |
| Zeng [ | 30-day mortality | Multivariate models: age, sex, GCS, KS, PPS, APACHE II, APACHE IV, APS | Mortality: | Yes: increasing frailty as measured by the FI was associated with increased risk of 30-day and 300-day mortality |
HR hazard ratio, APACHE acute physiology chronic health evaluation, SOFA sequential organ failure assessment, IADL instrumental activities of daily living, BADL basic activities of daily living, RBANS repeatable battery for the assessment of neuropsychological status, SF-36 medical outcomes survey short form-36, ADL activities of daily living, IQCODE informant questionnaire on cognitive decline in the elderly, CAM-ICU confusion assessment method for the intensive care unit, RASS richmond agitation sedation scale, MV mechanical ventilation, ICU intensive care unit, FI frailty index, OR odds ratio, CFS clinical frailty score, FP frailty phenotype, LOS length of stay, GCS Glasgow coma scale, KS Karnofsky scale, PPS palliative performance scale, APS acute physiology score, SAPS II score simplified acute physiologic score II, IRR incidence rate ratio, RRR relative risk ratio
aAll ranges are 95% CI