| Literature DB >> 31040654 |
Jantine van Rijckevorsel-Scheele1, Renate C W J Willems1, Pepijn D D M Roelofs1, Elin Koppelaar1, Robbert J J Gobbens2,3,4, Marleen J B M Goumans1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Many health care interventions have been developed that aim to improve or maintain the quality of life for frail elderly. A clear overview of these health care interventions for frail elderly and their effects on quality of life is missing.Entities:
Keywords: exercise programs; frailty; interventions; multidisciplinary treatment; quality of life; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31040654 PMCID: PMC6453553 DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S190425
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Interv Aging ISSN: 1176-9092 Impact factor: 4.458
Figure 1Study selection flowchart.
Abbreviation: ADL, activities of daily life.
Figure 2Methodological quality of the included studies, using the Cochrane collaboration’s tool for assessing risk of bias.
Figure 3Risk of bias graph: review authors’ judgments about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.
An overview of the included studies, characteristics and outcomes
| Reference | Study population | Design | Definition of frailty | Intervention | Control group | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cameron et al, 2013 | Frail adults aged ≥70 years who completed their treatment within the division of Rehabilitation and Aged Care Services in Australia, not living in a residential aged care facility (n=241) | Randomized controlled trial | CHS criteria for frailty (≥3 of the following: weak grip, slow gait, exhaustion, low energy expenditure, and weight loss) | Interdisciplinary treatment program targeting the identified characteristics of frailty for a 12-month period | Usual care | |
| Chan et al, 2017 | Frail elderly, aged ≥65 years, openly recruited from neighborhood elderly centers in Hong Kong (n=101) | Multicenter, randomized controlled trial | Tilburg Frailty Indicator ≥5 | 12-week acupressure intervention four times a week during 15 minutes. Given twice by a caregiver dyad and twice by a registered Chinese medicine practitioner | Waiting list | |
| Cohen et al, 2002 | Frail patients, aged ≥65 years and hospitalized at a Veterans Affairs medical center in the USA (n=409 included in trial) | Randomized controlled trial | Patients who met ≥ two of the following criteria were considered to be frail: inability to perform one or more ADL, a stroke ≤ three months, history of falls, difficulty walking, malnutrition, dementia, depression, ≥ one unplanned admissions in the previous three months, prolonged bed rest, or incontinence | Care in an inpatient geriatric unit followed by care at an outpatient geriatric clinic. The interventions involved teams that provided geriatric assessment and management | Usual inpatient care followed by usual outpatient care | |
| Ekerstad et al, 2017 | Frail elderly, aged ≥75 year, in need of acute in-hospital treatment in Sweden (n=408) | Randomized controlled, one center, trial | Two or more criteria from the Frail Elderly Support research group screening instrument | Structured, systematic interdisciplinary comprehensive geriatric assessment-based care at an acute elderly care unit | Usual care | |
| Fairhall et al, 2015 | Frail community-dwelling people who were discharged from a rehabilitation division of a Health Service in Sydney, aged ≥70 years (n=241) | Cost-effectiveness study embedded in a randomized controlled trial | CHS criteria for frailty (≥3 of the following: weak grip, slow gait, exhaustion, low energy expenditure, and weight loss) | 12-month interdisciplinary, multifactorial intervention targeting the components of frailty, delivered by an interdisciplinary team | Usual care | |
| Favela et al, 2013 | Frail adults aged >60 years, living in Mexico with health insurance supplied by the Mexican Social Security Institute (n=133) | Randomized controlled trial | Frailty index score ≥0.14. Count of different symptoms, illnesses, and other conditions (n=34). Frailty index score = number of items present/number of total items | Weekly nurse home visits over a 9-month period including alert buttons vs nurse home visits alone | Usual care | This information was requested from the authors |
| Giné-Garriga et al, 2013 | Frail adults, 80–90 years old, selected from a primary health care center in the Barcelona area (n=51) | Randomized controlled trial | Frail when (a) more than 10 seconds to perform a rapid-gait test; (b) could not stand up five times; or (c) if found frail by the (Fried) exhaustion criterion | 12-week functional circuit training program: combination of functional balance and lower body strength-based exercises twice a week | Usual care with health education meetings once a week | |
| Hempenius et al, 2013 | Frail patients, aged >65 years | Randomized controlled trial | GFI score >3. The GFI screens for loss of function and resources in four domains: physical, cognitive, social and psychological | Preoperative geriatric consultation, an individual treatment plan targeting risk factors for delirium, daily visits by a geriatric nurse during the hospital stay and advice on managing any problems encountered | Usual care | Univariate binary logistic regression analysis, outcome score of the SF-36 were dichotomized as same/better or worse scores |
| Hoogeboom et al, 2010 | Frail elderly aged ≥70 years with hip osteoarthritis awaiting total hip replacement in the Netherlands (n= 21) | Pilot randomized controlled trial | Score of ≥2 on the CSHA Clinical Frailty Scale; the Clinical Frailty Scale ranges from 1 (robust health) to 7 (complete functional dependence on others) | A short (3–6 weeks) preoperative tailor-made, therapeutic exercise program at least twice a week. Patients were encouraged to exercise at home | Usual care | |
| Hoogendijk et al 2016 | Community-dwelling frail older adults aged ≥65 years recruited through 35 primary care practices in the Netherlands (n=1,147) | Stepped wedge cluster randomized controlled trial | PRISMA-7 score of ≥3 PRISMA-7 is a brief 7-item questionnaire containing risk factors for functional decline | Geriatric Care Model (GCM): a geriatric in-home assessment by a practice nurse, followed by a tailored care plan. Complex patients were reviewed in multidisciplinary consultations | Usual care | |
| Kircher et al, 2007 | Frail patients who were hospitalized in hospitals with a geriatric evaluation and management (GEM) team in Germany, at least 65 years old (n=345). Patients from hospitals without this team formed an external comparison group (n=90) | Randomized controlled trial | ≥2 of the criteria proposed by Lachs et al (measuring vision, hearing, arm and leg function, urinary incontinence, nutrition, mental status, depression, instrumental and basic activities of daily living, environmental hazards, and social support systems) | Comprehensive geriatric assessment and management in the form of consultations and follow-up provided by the GEM team | Control group: Usual care Comparison group: usual care in other hospitals (without GEM team present) | |
| Langlois et al, 2013 | Frail older adults, aged 61–89 years (n=83; 34 frail older adults and 38 non-frail older adults) | Matched-control group design | Participants were categorized as frail if they met at least two of the three following diagnostic criteria: (a) three of the five symptoms defined by Fried et al, (b) a score of ≤28/36 on the modified Physical Performance Test, (c) identified as frail according to the geriatrician’s judgment based on the frailty index. To be classified as non-frail, participants could not meet any of these three frailty criteria | Physical exercise-training program consisted of 12 weeks of 1-hour exercise session 3 days a week | Participants were instructed to maintain their current level of activity. After participating in the study, they were offered the opportunity to join a physical training program | |
| Latham et al, 2003 | Frail patients aged 65 and older admitted to geriatric rehabilitation units in New Zealand and Australia (n=243) | Randomized controlled trial | Frail patients were those who had one or more health problems or functional limitations from a list of indicators that included dependency in an activity of daily living (ADL), prolonged bed rest, impaired mobility, or a recent fall | Single dose of vitamin D 10 weeks of high-intensity quadriceps resistance exercise three times a week started in the hospital and continued at home | Placebo tablet Social home visits (attention) | |
| Looman et al, 2014 | All GP patients aged ≥75 years of the 3 GP practices in the experimental (n=222) and 6 GP practices in the control group (n=224) | Quasi-experimental study | GFI score ≥4 | Preventive integrated care model: Comprehensive assessment of care needs with EASYcare. Treatment goals were translated into a multidisciplinary treatment plan | Usual care | |
| Metzelthin et al, 2014 | Community-dwelling frail older people, aged ≥70 years in the south of the Netherlands, recruited from GP practices (n=346) | Cluster randomized controlled trial | GFI score ≥5 points | Proactive primary care approach which included an in-home assessment and interdisciplinary care based on a tailor-made treatment plan | Usual care | |
| O’Connell et al, 2011 | Intermediate frail or frail community-dwelling men aged ≥65 years with low testosterone levels, recruited by advertisements or mailed invitations from family practice registers in England (n=274) | Randomized controlled trial | Based on the criteria of Fried: unintentional weight loss, self-reported exhaustion, low physical activity, slow walk time and low handgrip strength. Intermediate frail: 1 or 2 criteria, frail: 3 or more criteria of Fried | 6 months testosterone gel (25 or 75 mg daily) | Placebo | |
| Oosting et al, 2012 | Frail patients, aged >65 years, scheduled for elective total hip arthroplasty in the Netherlands (n= 30) | Pilot randomized controlled trial | Score of 2 or higher on the frailty index ISAR which consists of six self-report questions on functional dependence, recent hospitalization impaired memory and vision and polymedication. | A preoperative program to train functional activities and walking capacity twice a week for 3–6 weeks during supervised sessions and instructions to additionally train 4 times/week at home and use a pedometer | Usual care which consisted of a single group information session | |
| Van Hout et al, 2010 | Frail elderly, age ≥75 years and listed as primary care patient, living at home in the Netherlands (n=651) | Randomized controlled trial | Frail: self-reported score in the worst quartile of at least two of six COOP-WONCA charts | Preventive home visiting program, with seven key characteristics including assessment of health risks and care needs an individually tailored care plans and nurse home visits | Usual care | SF-36 physical component: mean ± SD deviation |
| Yuri et al, 2016 | Frail older people aged ≥65 years, living in the community in Izumi, Osaka, Japan (n=143) | A cluster nonrandomized controlled trial | The 25-item Kihon Checklist has seven domains: activities of daily living, physical strength, nutritional status, oral function, houseboundness, cognitive function and depression risk. According to Japanese frailty criteria, eligibility for this study was defined as having one or more of the following: “low physical strength,” “low nutritional status,” “low oral function,” or “generally frail” status | Standard preventive care program in combination with life goal-setting support (SPCP + LGST) | Standard preventive care program (SPCP): physical exercise classes, oral care and nutrition education | QoL: 5 point Likert scale. group: mean (SD) |
Notes:
MeanΔint.group, meanΔcontrol group: mean change in score between baseline and discharge/12 months. Mean change in score given for the intervention group and the control group.
MeanΔint.group, meanΔcontrol group: mean change in score between discharge and 12 months.
Abbreviations: ADL, activity of daily living; CHS, Cardiovascular Health Study; CSHA, ; COOP-WONCA, ; GEM, geriatric evaluation and management; GFI, Groningen Frailty Indicator; GP, general practitioner; HOOS QoL, Hip disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score - quality of life subscale; HUI-3, Health Utilities Index-3; ICECAP, Investigating Choice Experiments for CAPability measure for Older people; ISAR, Identification of Seniors At Risk; Mean int. group, mean score of intervention group (at the described follow-up period); QoL, quality of life; SF-12 MCS, Short form-12 mental health composite scale; SF-12 PCS, Short form-12 physical health composite scale; SF-36 MCS, Short form-36 mental health composite scale; WHOQOL-BREF, WHO Quality of Life-BREF.