| Literature DB >> 33167965 |
Fanny Petermann-Rocha1,2, Peter Hanlon1, Stuart R Gray2, Paul Welsh2, Jason M R Gill1, Hamish Foster1, S Vittal Katikireddi1, Donald Lyall1, Daniel F Mackay1, Catherine A O'Donnell1, Naveed Sattar2, Barbara I Nicholl1, Jill P Pell1, Bhautesh D Jani1, Frederick K Ho1, Frances S Mair1, Carlos Celis-Morales3,4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Frailty has been associated with worse prognosis following COVID-19 infection. While several studies have reported the association between frailty and COVID-19 mortality or length of hospital stay, there have been no community-based studies on the association between frailty and risk of severe infection. Considering that different definitions have been identified to assess frailty, this study aimed to compare the association between frailty and severe COVID-19 infection in UK Biobank using two frailty classifications: the frailty phenotype and the frailty index.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Coronavirus; Frailty; Risk factors
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33167965 PMCID: PMC7652674 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-020-01822-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Overlap between the frailty phenotype and frailty index
| Robust, | Mild, | Moderate or severe, | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Robust, | 170,964 (44.5) | 55,456 (14.5) | 2665 (0.7) | 229,085 (59.7) |
| Pre-frail, | 75,898 (19.8) | 57,719 (15.0) | 9307 (2.4) | 142,924 (37.2) |
| Frail, | 1770 (0.5) | 6080 (1.6) | 3986 (1.0) | 11,836 (3.1) |
| Total | 248,632 (64.8) | 119,255 (31.1) | 15,958 (4.1) |
Data presented as absolute numbers and prevalence for each frailty measurement
Characteristics of the population according to their COVID-19 test and the frailty phenotype
| No COVID-19 associated admission or death | Severe COVID-19 infection | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Robust | Pre-frail | Frail | Robust | Pre-frail | Frail | |
| Total, | 228,731 | 142,550 | 11,762 | 354 | 374 | 74 |
| Baseline age (years), mean (SD) | 56.0 (8.1) | 56.5 (8.1) | 57.4 (7.7) | 60.3 (7.7) | 59.8 (7.8) | 59.5 (7.9) |
| Current age (years), mean (SD) | 67.1 (8.1) | 67.5 (8.1) | 68.4 (7.7) | 71.3 (7.8) | 70.8 (7.8) | 70.6 (8.0) |
| Sex (female), | 120,231 (52.6) | 83,011 (58.2) | 7772 (66.1) | 116 (32.8) | 145 (38.8) | 35 (47.3) |
| Deprivation, | ||||||
| Lower | 83,333 (36.5) | 42,368 (29.7) | 2086 (17.7) | 92 (26.0) | 87 (23.3) | 9 (12.1) |
| Middle | 78,557 (34.3) | 46,199 (32.4) | 2947 (25.1) | 123 (34.7) | 95 (25.4) | 15 (20.3) |
| Higher | 66,841 (29.2) | 53,983 (37.9) | 6729 (57.2) | 139 (39.3) | 192 (51.3) | 50 (67.6) |
| Ethnicity, | ||||||
| White | 220,508 (96.4) | 132,223 (92.8) | 10,204 (86.8) | 325 (91.8) | 324 (86.6) | 63 (85.1) |
| Non-white | 8223 (3.6) | 10,327 (7.2) | 1558 (13.2) | 29 (8.2) | 50 (13.4) | 11 (14.9) |
| Smoking status, | ||||||
| Never | 130,457 (57.0) | 76,966 (54.0) | 5737 (48.8) | 134 (37.9) | 177 (47.3) | 25 (33.8) |
| Previous | 79,074 (34.6) | 49,909 (35.0) | 4021 (34.2) | 173 (48.9) | 151 (40.4) | 37 (50.0) |
| Current | 19,200 (8.4) | 15,675 (11.0) | 2004 (17.0) | 47 (13.2) | 46 (12.3) | 12 (16.2) |
| Alcohol intake, | ||||||
| Daily or almost daily | 53,467 (23.4) | 25,316 (17.8) | 1176 (10.0) | 77 (21.8) | 62 (16.6) | 9 (12.2) |
| One to four times a week | 119,836 (52.4) | 66,267 (46.5) | 3711 (31.6) | 172 (48.6) | 147 (39.3) | 24 (32.4) |
| One to three times a month | 23,582 (10.3) | 17,695 (12.4) | 1487 (12.6) | 40 (11.2) | 43 (11.5) | 10 (13.5) |
| Never or special occasions | 31,846 (13.9) | 33,272 (23.3) | 5388 (45.8) | 65 (18.4) | 122 (32.6) | 31 (41.9) |
| Multimorbidity, | ||||||
| None | 93,868 (41.0) | 40,383 (28.4) | 1068 (9.1) | 87 (24.6) | 65 (17.4) | 6 (8.1) |
| 1 | 78,185 (34.2) | 46,384 (32.5) | 2357 (20.0) | 119 (33.6) | 106 (28.3) | 7 (9.5) |
| 2–3 | 51,407 (22.5) | 46,373 (32.5) | 5371 (45.7) | 133 (37.6) | 156 (41.7) | 36 (48.6) |
| ≥ 4 | 5271 (2.3) | 9410 (6.6) | 2966 (25.2) | 15 (4.2) | 47 (12.6) | 25 (33.8) |
The frailty phenotype was derived using an adaptation from the original derived by Fried et al. Participants were classified as frail if they fulfilled three or more criteria, pre-frail if they fulfilled one or two criteria, and robust if they did not fulfil any criteria at baseline
SD standard deviation, n number
Fig. 1Associations between the frailty phenotype, the frailty index, and severe COVID-19 infection. Data presented as RRs with their 95% CIs using Poisson regression analyses. Robust individuals were used as the reference group for the frailty phenotype and the frailty index. Model 1, adjusted by age and sex; model 2, as model 1 but also included deprivation, and ethnicity: white versus others; model 3, included smoking and alcohol intake only; model 4, included the covariates in models 2 and 3
Fig. 2Associations between the frailty phenotype, the frailty index, and severe COVID-19 infection by subgroups. Data presented as RRs with their 95% CIs using Poisson regression analyses. Robust individuals were used as the reference group for the frailty phenotype and the frailty index. All the analyses were adjusted by age, sex, deprivation, ethnicity, smoking, and alcohol intake when these were not the subgroup used