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Journal ArticleDOI

Frailty in Older Adults Evidence for a Phenotype

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TLDR
This study provides a potential standardized definition for frailty in community-dwelling older adults and offers concurrent and predictive validity for the definition, and finds that there is an intermediate stage identifying those at high risk of frailty.
Abstract
Background: Frailty is considered highly prevalent in old age and to confer high risk for falls, disability, hospitalization, and mortality. Frailty has been considered synonymous with disability, comorbidity, and other characteristics, but it is recognized that it may have a biologic basis and be a distinct clinical syndrome. A standardized definition has not yet been established. Methods: To develop and operationalize a phenotype of frailty in older adults and assess concurrent and predictive validity, the study used data from the Cardiovascular Health Study. Participants were 5,317 men and women 65 years and older (4,735 from an original cohort recruited in 1989-90 and 582 from an African American cohort recruited in 1992-93). Both cohorts received almost identical baseline evaluations and 7 and 4 years of follow-up, respectively, with annual examinations and surveillance for outcomes including incident disease, hospitalization, falls, disability, and mortality. Results: Frailty was defined as a clinical syndrome in which three or more of the following criteria were present: unintentional weight loss (10 lbs in past year), self-reported exhaustion, weakness (grip strength), slow walking speed, and low physical activity. The overall prevalence of frailty in this community-dwelling population was 6.9%; it increased with age and was greater in women than men. Four-year incidence was 7.2%. Frailty was associated with being African American, having lower education and income, poorer health, and having higher rates of comorbid chronic diseases and disability. There was overlap, but not concordance, in the cooccurrence of frailty, comorbidity, and disability. This frailty phenotype was independently predictive (over 3 years) of incident falls, worsening mobility or ADL disability, hospitalization, and death, with hazard ratios ranging from 1.82 to 4.46, unadjusted, and 1.29-2.24, adjusted for a number of health, disease, and social characteristics predictive of 5-year mortality. Intermediate frailty status, as indicated by the presence of one or two criteria, showed intermediate risk of these outcomes as well as increased risk of becoming frail over 3-4 years of follow-up (odds ratios for incident frailty = 4.51 unadjusted and 2.63 adjusted for covariates, compared to those with no frailty criteria at baseline). Conclusions: This study provides a potential standardized definition for frailty in community-dwelling older adults and offers concurrent and predictive validity for the definition. It also finds that there is an intermediate stage identifying those at high risk of frailty. Finally, it provides evidence that frailty is not synonymous with either comorbidity or disability, but comorbidity is an etiologic risk factor for, and disability is an outcome of, frailty. This provides a potential basis for clinical assessment for those who are frail or at risk, and for future research to develop interventions for frailty based on a standardized ascertainment of frailty.

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Citations
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Frailty, Length of Stay, and Mortality in Kidney Transplant Recipients: A National Registry and Prospective Cohort Study

TL;DR: Frail KT recipients are more likely to experience a longer LOS, and frailty is a measure of physiologic reserve that may be an important clinical marker of longer surgical LOS.
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Role of Apoptosis in Sarcopenia

TL;DR: The activation of these proteolytic caspases may be partly responsible for the initiation of muscle protein degradation, loss of muscle nuclei, which is associated with local atrophy, and finally into cell death of the myocyte.
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Frailty and Cognitive Function in Incident Hemodialysis Patients

TL;DR: In adult incident HD patients, frailty is associated with worse cognitive function, particularly global cognitive function (3MS), particularlyglobal cognitive function in adults of all ages undergoing HD.
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Sleep Disturbances and Risk of Frailty and Mortality in Older Men

TL;DR: Among non-frail older men, poor subjective sleep quality, greater nighttime wakefulness, and greater nocturnal hypoxemia were independently associated with higher odds of frailty or death at follow-up, while excessive daytime sleepiness, great nighttime wakeness, severe sleep apnea and greaterNocturnal Hypoxemiawere independently associatedwith an increased risk of mortality.
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Therapeutic Interventions for Frail Elderly Patients: Part I. Published Randomized Trials

TL;DR: Randomized clinical trials that tested one or more therapeutic interventions in a population of frail older adults were reviewed and the main findings are explored along with a discussion of their relative merits and limitations.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: A questionnaire for evaluating energy expenditure in leisure time physical activity (LTA) along with information about its validity is presented in this paper, which is valid for use in longitudinal studies in North America of the relationship of physical activity to disease, in weight control clinics and in other researches in which leisure-time physical activity is of interest.
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