4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Identifying frailty in hospitalized older adults with significant coronary artery disease

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY
Volume 54, Issue 11, Pages 1674-1681

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2006.00914.x

Keywords

frailty; gait speed; coronary artery disease; hospital screening

Funding

  1. NICHD NIH HHS [K01 HD049593-01A1, K01 HD049593-02, K01 HD049593] Funding Source: Medline

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To characterize physiological variation in hospitalized older adults with severe coronary artery disease (CAD) and evaluate the prevalence of frailty in this sample, to determine whether single-item performance measures are good indicators of multidimensional frailty, and to estimate the association between frailty and 6-month mortality. Observational cohort study. Inpatient hospital cardiology ward. Three hundred nine consecutive inpatients aged 70 and older admitted to a cardiology service (n = 309; 70% male, 84% white) with minimum two-vessel CAD determined using cardiac catheterization. Two standard frailty phenotypes (Composite A and Composite B), usual gait speed, grip strength, chair stands, cardiology clinical variables, and 6-month mortality. Prevalence of frailty was 27% for Composite A versus 63% for Composite B. Utility of single-item measures for identifying frailty was greatest for gait speed (receiver operating characteristic curve c statistic = 0.89 for Composite A, 0.70 for Composite B) followed by chair-stands (c = 0.83, 0.66) and grip strength (c = 0.78, 0.57). After adjustment, composite scores and single-item measures were individually associated with higher mortality at 6 months. Slow gait speed (<= 0.65 m/s) and poor grip strength (<= 25 kg) were stronger predictors of 6-month mortality than either composite score (gait speed odds ratio (OR) = 3.8, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.1-13.1; grip strength OR = 2.7, 95% CI = 0.7-10.0; Composite A OR = 1.9, 95% CI = 0.60-6.1; chair-stand OR = 1.5, 95% CI = 0.5-5.1; Composite B OR = 1.3, 95% CI = 0.3-5.2). Gait speed frailty was the strongest predictor of mortality in a population with CAD and may add to traditional risk assessments when predicting outcomes in this population.

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