| Literature DB >> 31849819 |
Katie Palmer1, Davide L Vetrano1,2, Luca Padua1, Valeria Romano3, Chiara Rivoiro3, Bibiana Scelfo3, Alessandra Marengoni4, Roberto Bernabei1, Graziano Onder5.
Abstract
Background: Frailty can change the prognosis and treatment approach of chronic diseases. Among others, frailty has been associated with cerebrovascular diseases such as stroke. However, the extent to which the two conditions are related is unclear, and no systematic review of the literature has been conducted.Entities:
Keywords: aging; cerebrovascular disease; chronic disease; frail; geriatric; prefrail; stroke; vulnerable
Year: 2019 PMID: 31849819 PMCID: PMC6896936 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.01255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart.
Characteristics of the selected studies on cerebrovascular disease and frailty: study methods and main results.
| Avila-Funes et al. ( | France, AMImage study, Community | 176 | 75 ± 5.2 | 40 | Self-reported history of physician diagnosed stroke. 4.4% | Fried criteria. | Robust = 4.0 | White matter hyperintensities (mL) higher in frail (mean = 12.1, | 6 |
| Chen et al. ( | Japan, Sasaguri Genkimon Study (SGS), Community | 1,565 | Range 65–93 | 60 | Self-reported history of having ever been diagnosed with stroke. 3.6% | Fried criteria. Overall frail = 9.5, prefrail = 43.9% | Robust = 2.6 | 6 | |
| Calado et al. ( | Brazil, FIBRA study (Study of Frailty in Elderly Brazilian Individuals), Community | 385 | 73.9 ± 6.5 | 64.7 | “Stroke.” Self-report (questionnaire) on any chronic diseases that had been recognized by a doctor during the past year. 2.1% | Fried criteria. Overall frail = 9.1, prefrail = 49.6% | Robust = 0 | 6 | |
| de Albuquerque Sousa et al. ( | Brazil, REDE FIBRA (Network of Studies on the Frailty of Elderly Brazilians), Community | 391 | 74.1 ± 6.6 Range 65–96 | 61.4 | Self-reported presence of stroke diagnosed in the last year. 1.8% | Fried criteria. Overall frail = 17.1%, prefrail = 60.1% | Robust = 1.1 | 5 | |
| Espinoza et al. ( | USA, San Antonio Longitudinal Study of Aging (SALSA), Community | 394 | Range 65–80 | 57.6 | Stroke was assessed according to self-report of physician-diagnosed disease. 10.7% | Fried criteria. Overall frail = 10.7% | Odds of frailty not significant in multi-adjusted models (data not shown) | 7 | |
| Lahousse et al. ( | The Netherlands, Rotterdam study, Community | 2,833 | Median = 74 Range ≥ 55 | 55.9 | Stroke was “clinically validated.” Prevalence not reported. | Fried criteria. Overall frail = 6%, prefrail = 51% | Robust = 0.8 | 5 | |
| Lee et al. ( | Hong Kong, Community | 3,018 | 49.7 | Participants were asked whether they had ever been told by a physician that they had a stroke. Medical diagnoses were cross-checked in the computerized medical system database of the Hong Kong Hospital Authority. Diagnoses were counted as present if reported by the participant or recorded in the medical database. 5.2% in men, 3.5% in women | Fried frailty criteria. 2 year change in frailty status was assessed (e.g., robust worsening (from robust to prefrail or frail), prefrail worsening (from prefrail to frail). Overall baseline frail = 7.9%, prefrail = 50.6% | At 2 year follow-up, about half of prefrail persons remained prefrail, but 11.1% of men and 6.6% of women worsened into frailty, and a quarter recovered into the robust state. Among the frail at baseline, one-quarter remained frail. | 7 | ||
| Li et al. ( | China, RulAS population-based survey | 1,757 | 75.3 (3.9) | 53.3 | Past medical history taken by physicians using a standard questionnaire. 7.3% | Fried criteria, frailty = 10.1% | Fried Robust = 6.2% | 7 | |
| Llibre Rodriguez et al. ( | 8 countries, 10/66 Study, Community | 1,6886 | ≥65 | 62.4% | Stroke was self-reported, but confirmed by the interviewer as having characteristic symptoms lasting for more than 24 h. 6.7% | Modified Fried criteria (only four indicators measured) | Pooled estimates (10 sites in 8 countries) | 7 | |
| Merchant et al. ( | Singapore, HOPE (Healthy Older People Everyday), Community | 1,051 | 71.2 | 57.2 | Patients screened for chronic diseases, including stroke | 5-Item frailty scale (fatigue, resistance, ambulation, illness, loss of weight) ( | Robust = 1.7 | 5 | |
| Nadruz et al. ( | USA, Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, Community | 3,991 | 75.6 ± 5.0 | 59 | Previous Stroke. 2.7% | Fried criteria. Overall frail = 5.3% | Robust = 2 | 6 | |
| Ng et al. ( | Singapore, SLAS—Singapore Longitudinal Aging Studies I and II, Community | 1,685 | 66.7 ± 7.76 | 64 | The self-report of a medical disorder diagnosed and treated by a physician(s) was recorded for 22 named diagnoses, including stroke. 32% | Fried criteria. Overall frail = 5%, prefrail = 42% | Robust = 1.6 | Significant correlates of prefrailty-frailty from binary logistic regression via backward stepwise variable selection: Stroke B = 0.76 OR = 2.1 (1.1–4.1), | 5 |
| Seamon et al. ( | USA, Medicare sample | 7,258 | 79.4 (8.4) | 56.7 | All patients hospitalized with a first-time acute ischemic stroke. 100% | Faurot Frailty Index | 39.1% of stroke patients were robust, 36.0% were prefrail, and 24.9% were frail. | 4 | |
| Serra-Prat et al. ( | Spain, Community | 154 | 80.1 (3.5) | 47.5 | Information on comorbidities and medications was obtained from the electronic medical records held by the corresponding centers. All other information was obtained directly from the patient by trained healthcare professionals. Prevalence not reported. | Fried criteria. Overall frail = 53.7%, prefrail = 14.2% | Robust = 8.7 | Crude OR for frailty in stroke patients = 3.82 (1.7–8.58). Adjusted OR = 4.5 (1.35–14.97), | 6 |
| Taylor-Rowan et al. ( | UK, Patients consecutively admitted to acute stroke unit | 545 | 69 (14) | 46 | Physician diagnosed. 100% | 33 item frailty index. | 28% of stroke patients were frail and 51% were prefrail. | 4 | |
| Trevisan et al. ( | Italy, Progetto Veneto Anziani, Community | 2,925 | 74.4 ± 7.3 Range ≥ 56 | 59.7 | Personal interview, medical interview and clinical examination including blood tests. Cardiovascular disease (CVD) was defined as atrial fibrillation; congestive heart failure; angina pectoris requiring a stent, angioplasty, or hospitalization; myocardial infarction; or stroke. Prevalence not reported. | Fried criteria. Overall frail = 6.6%, prefrail = 49.3% | Of the persons who were nonfrail at baseline 26.7% became prefrail at follow-up and 6.3% became frail. Progressing from prefrail to frail stroke OR = 1.96 (1.72–2.24), | 8 | |
| Vaingankar et al. ( | Singapore, Well-being of the Singapore Elderly study, Community | 2,102 | 69 Range ≥60 | Not specified. Field interviewers collected data on medical conditions. “Stroke” | Fried criteria. Overall frail = 40.1%, prefrail = 5.7% | Robust = 2.2 | Prefrailty OR = 2.6 (1.2–5.8), | 6 | |
| Winovich et al. ( | USA, Cardiovascular Health Study, subsample of persons with incident ischemic stroke | 893 | 82 ± 6.4 | 61 | Incident stroke events identified through semi-annual phone calls, hospital discharge report review, and health insurance registries. | Fried criteria. | In patients with incident stroke, 27.8% were robust, 54.9% prefrail and 17.3% frail. No comparison between no stroke controls. | 5 |
ADJ, adjustment variables; ADL, activities of daily living; CMB, Cerebral Microbleeds; CRP, C-reactive protein; CT, Computed tomography; CVD, cardiovascular disease; DSM-IV, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition; HR, hazard ratio; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; NOS, Newcastle Ottawa Scale risk of bias score; OR, odds ratio; VaD, vascular dementia.
All numbers are rounded to one decimal point.
In all studies using Fried criteria, the cutoff for frailty was 3 out of 5 symptoms, and prefrailty was 1–2 symptoms.
Figure 2Proportion of stroke participants who were robust/without frailty [according to Fried et al. (5) criteria].
Figure 3Proportion of stroke participants with prefrailty [according to Fried et al. (5) criteria].
Figure 4Proportion of stroke participants with frailty [according to Fried et al. (5) criteria].
Figure 5Proportion of robust participants [according to Fried et al. (5) criteria] with stroke.
Figure 6Proportion of prefrail participants [according to Fried et al. (5) criteria] with stroke.
Figure 7Proportion of frail participants [according to Fried et al. (5) criteria] with stroke.
Figure 8Pooled odds ratio and 95% Confidence Intervals on the association between stroke and frailty.