| Literature DB >> 36167853 |
Michael Wagner1,2, Martin Wehling3, Farhad Pazan4, Hanna Breunig4, Christel Weiss5, Susanne Röhr6, Melanie Luppa6, Michael Pentzek7, Horst Bickel8, Dagmar Weeg8, Siegfried Weyerer9, Birgitt Wiese10, Hans-Helmut König11, Christian Brettschneider11, Kathrin Heser1, Wolfgang Maier1, Martin Scherer12, Steffi Riedel-Heller6.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Higher Fit fOR The Aged (FORTA) scores have been shown to be negatively associated with adverse clinical outcomes in older hospitalized patients. This has not been evaluated in other health care settings. The aim of this study was to examine the association of the FORTA score with relevant outcomes in the prospective AgeCoDe-AgeQualiDe cohort of community-dwelling older people. In particular, the longitudinal relation between the FORTA score and mortality and the incidence of dementia was evaluated.Entities:
Keywords: Dementia; Inappropriate prescribing; Multimorbidity; Older people; Polypharmacy
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36167853 PMCID: PMC9546968 DOI: 10.1007/s00228-022-03389-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 0031-6970 Impact factor: 3.064
The baseline characteristics of the cohort (total number = 504) at follow-up 6. n number of cases
| Mean FORTA score (median; range) | 6.2 (6; 0–18) |
| Mean age (median; range) | 87.9 (87.5; 83–101) |
| Mean number of diseases (median; range) | 5.3 (5; 0–14) |
| Mean number of medications (median; range) | 7.99 (7; 5–23) |
| Gender female % ( | 69.6 (351) |
| Hypertension % ( | 82.3 (415) |
| Arthritis % ( | 61.1 (308) |
| Lipid metabolism disorder % ( | 57.3 (289) |
| Chronic backpain % ( | 42.8 (216) |
| Coronary heart disease % ( | 41.8 (211) |
| Heart failure % ( | 36.7 (185) |
| Cardiac arrhythmias % ( | 35.3 (178) |
| Type II Diabetes % ( | 29.9 (151) |
| Depression % ( | 28.9 (146) |
| Dementia % ( | 17.8 (90) |
Fig. 1a, b Box plot of assessment of activities of daily living (Barthel Index) in a and instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) according to Lawton and Brody in b for the group with low vs. high Fit fOR The Aged (FORTA) scores at follow-up 6; the cutoff at 6 (= median) was chosen to provide nearly equal numbers of observations in both groups. The horizontal line represents the median, the box represents interquartile range, whiskers represent 95% confidence intervals, crosses represent the mean, and the circle represents an outlier
Multivariate Poisson regression analysis between FORTA score/possible confounders at follow-up 6 and ADL/IADL at follow-up 6. Regression coefficients are provided in parenthesis
| FORTA score | < 0.0001 (− 0.0035) | < 0.0001 (− 0.0337) |
| Number of medications | < 0.0001 (0.0391) | < 0.0001 (0.0402) |
| Gender | 0.0775 (− 0.077) | 0.0104 (− 0.1022) |
| Age | 0.3102 (0.0062) | 0.4274 (0.0049) |
| Number of diseases | 0.0141 (0.0156) | 0.0216 (0.0145) |
Comparison of mean FORTA scores of participants who died vs. those alive (right) and comparison of mean FORTA scores of participants with dementia vs. those without dementia (left, Wilcoxon-Mann–Whitney test); n number of cases, FU follow-up
| FU6 | 7.52 (90) | 5.77 (414) | < 0.0001 | - | - | - |
| FU7 | 7.31 (75) | 5.72 (374) | < 0.0001 | 6.98 (55) | 6.06 (449) | 0.0154 |
| FU8 | 7.16 (67) | 5.72 (360) | < 0.0001 | 7.08 (77) | 5.99 (427) | 0.0007 |
| FU9 | 6.93 (55) | 5.71 (340) | < 0.0001 | 6.86 (109) | 5.96 (395) | 0.0006 |