| Literature DB >> 33871790 |
Carlijn G N Voorend1, Hanneke Joosten2, Noeleen C Berkhout-Byrne3, Adry Diepenbroek4, Casper F M Franssen4, Willem Jan W Bos3,5, Marjolijn Van Buren3,6, Simon P Mooijaart7.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Unidentified cognitive decline and other geriatric impairments are prevalent in older patients with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD). Despite guideline recommendation of geriatric evaluation, routine geriatric assessment is not common in these patients. While high burden of vascular disease and existing pre-dialysis care pathways mandate a tailored geriatric assessment, no consensus exists on which instruments are most suitable in this population to identify geriatric impairments. Therefore, the aim of this study was to propose a geriatric assessment, based on multidisciplinary consensus, to routinely identify major geriatric impairments in older people with advanced CKD.Entities:
Keywords: Aged; Chronic kidney diseases; Clinical decision-making; Consensus development; Frailty; Geriatric assessment
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33871790 PMCID: PMC8463384 DOI: 10.1007/s41999-021-00498-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Geriatr Med ISSN: 1878-7649 Impact factor: 1.710
List of participants of the expert meeting 31st of January, and input via round of comments
| Discipline | Number of participants ( |
|---|---|
| Nephrologist (i.t) | 12 |
| Geriatrician (i.t) | 5 |
| Medical doctor (otherwise) | 1 |
| Nephrologist/geriatrician | 2 |
| Nurse practitioner (nephrology) | 6 |
| Nurse (nephrology) | 3 |
| Social worker | 1 |
| Physician assistant (i.t) | 1 |
| Other: medical information officer, project leader | 2 |
i.t. in training
Instruments and scoring of the consensus-based nephrology-tailored geriatric assessment
| Domain | Instrument | Executed by | Explanation | Score/cut-off | Duration (minutes) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Functional status | Activities of daily living (Katz ADL-6) [ | P | Grading of dependency on 6 functions, e.g., bathing, dressing, feeding | 0–6 b, ≥ 2 indicates dependency | 2 |
| Instrumental Activities of daily living (Lawton) [ | P | Grading of dependency on 8 more complex functions, e.g., ability to use telephone, housekeeping, medication | 0–8 for women, 0–5 for men. Higher scores indicate more independency, no cut-off point | 2 | |
| Handgrip strength | I | Best of 3 repetitive measurements with dominant hand (i.e., no vascular access) | Reference value depending on age and gender [ | 4 | |
| Fall risk assessment | I | 1-year fall history and fear of falling | Yes/no; 1 (‘no fear’) to 10 (‘very afraid’) | 1 | |
| Cognitive functioning | Montreal Cognitive Assessment [ | I | Screening for mild cognitive impairment in 8 domains (i.e., visuospatial, naming, memory, attention, language, abstraction, delayed recall, orientation) | 0–30, < 26 indication of cognitive impairment | 10 |
| 6-item Cognitive Impairment Test [ | I | 6-item screening for dementia, assessing orientation, attention, and memory | 0–28, ≥ 11 indication of cognitive impairment | 2–3 | |
| Letter Digit Substitution Test [ | I | Speed dependent task to measure speed of processing by matching letters to corresponding numbers provided in the key | Number of correct substitutions at 60 s; reference values depend on age, gender, education level [ | 5 | |
| Psychological status/mood | Whooley questions/Geriatric Depression Scale-15 [ | Ia | Two initial question on depressed mood and anhedonia in the past month If yes on at least one question, 15-item GDS assesses presence and degree of depressive symptoms | Yes/no 0–15, (≥ 6 indicative of depression) [ | 1 5–7 |
| Life Orientation Test-Revised [ | P | Dispositional optimism is measured by 10 items (including 4 filler items). Calculation of a total score, or the pessimism (reversed score on items 3, 7, 9) and optimism (items 1,4, 10) constructs separately | 0 (‘strongly disagree’) to 4 (‘strongly agree’) 0–24 total score, or 0–12 per construct. Higher scores indicate more optimism, reference values depend on age and gender [ | < 3 | |
| Patient reported outcome measures | HRQoL: 12-item Short Form Health Survey [ | P | 12 items on HRQoL providing a mental component summary (MCS) and physical component summary (PCS), using three- or five-point Likert scales | 0–100, higher scores indicating better HRQoL | ≤ 2 c |
| Dialysis Symptom Index [ | P | Measuring symptom burden, by indicating presence of 30 or any other additional symptoms. If present, patients are asked to specify for the degree of bothersome | Yes/no, if yes 1 (‘not at all’) to 5 (‘very much’) | 2–15 c | |
| Somatic status | Surprise question [ | C | Clinicians response to the question: | Yes/no | 1 |
| Clinical Frailty Score [ | C | Clinical judgement on a visual and written chart with 9 graded pictures. d | 1 (‘very fit’) to 9 (‘terminally ill’) | < 1 | |
| Charlson Comorbidity Index [ | C | Comorbid conditions weighted for increased severity of the condition | 1 to 6 points per condition, total range of 0–33 | 4 | |
| Polypharmacy | C | Assessed by means of the total number of different medication for chronic use (i.e., for more than 2 weeks) | Use of five or more medications daily | 2 | |
| Nutrition | Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment [ | P P/I | Short Form includes 4 self-reported items on weight development, food intake, symptoms, and activities Complete PG-SGA: 5 additional items to be filled in by a clinician or dietician (diagnosis, age, metabolic stress, physical examination) to assess numerical score | Short Form only: 0–36 (≥ 6 indicates malnutrition) Complete PG-SGA: 0–52 (≥ 9 indicates malnutrition)[ | 1 5–10 |
| Social | Caregiver burden: EDIZ-plus [ | CG | Self-perceived burden from informal care measured in 15-statements to ‘agree’, ‘neither agree/nor disagree’ or ‘disagree' | 1 point per question answered with ‘agree’; 0 (‘no burden’), 1–3 (‘minor burden’), 4–8 (‘moderate burden’), 9–15 (‘severe burden’) | 5 |
P patient, I interviewer, C clinician, CG caregiver, NA not available, HRQoL health-related quality of life, EDIZ Ervaren Druk door Informele Zorg [Self-perceived burden from informal care]
aGDS can be either self-administered or by an interviewer, for more in-depth assessment interviewer-administered is preferred
Score range 0–12 for the ternary-answering version
c12 min on average for both measures
dThe initial seven-point scale version was expanded to a nine-point scale by the authors of the clinical fraily scale