Frailty degree and illness trajectories in older people towards the end-of- life: a prospective observational study
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Data de publicació
2021ISSN
2044-6055
Resum
Objectives To assess the degree of frailty in older people
with different advanced diseases and its relationship with
end-of-
life
illness trajectories and survival.
Methods Prospective, observational study, including
all patients admitted to the Acute Geriatric Unit of the
University Hospital of Vic (Spain) during 12 consecutive
months (2014–2015), followed for up to 2 years.
Participants were identified as end-of-
life
people (EOLp)
using the NECPAL (NECesidades PALiativas, palliative care
needs) tool and were classified according to their dominant
illness trajectory. The Frail-VIG
index (Valoración Integral
Geriátrica, Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment) was
used to quantify frailty degree, to calculate the relationship
between frailty and mortality (Receiver Operating
Characteristic (ROC) curves), and to assess the combined
effect of frailty degree and illness trajectories on survival
(Cox proportional hazards model). Survival curves were
plotted using the Kaplan-Meier
estimator with participants
classified into four groups (ie, no frailty, mild frailty,
moderate frailty and advanced frailty) and were compared
using the log-rank
test.
Results Of the 590 persons with a mean (SD) age of 86.4
(5.6) years recruited, 260 (44.1%) were identified as EOLp,
distributed into cancer (n=31, 11.9%), organ failure (n=79,
30.4%), dementia (n=86, 33.1%) and multimorbidity
(n=64, 24.6%) trajectories. All 260 EOLp had some
degree of frailty, mostly advanced frailty (n=184, 70.8%),
regardless of the illness trajectory, and 220 (84.6%) died
within 2 years. The area under the ROC curve (95% CI)
after 2 years of follow-up
for EOLp was 0.87 (0.84 to 0.92)
with different patterns of survival decline in the different
end-of-
life
trajectories (p<0.0001). Cox regression
analyses showed that each additional deficit of the Frail-VIG
index increased the risk of death by 61.5%, 30.1%,
29.6% and 12.9% in people with dementia, organ failure,
multimorbidity and cancer, respectively (p<0.01 for all the
coefficients).
Conclusions All older people towards the end-of-
life
in this study were frail, mostly with advanced frailty.
The degree of frailty is related to survival across the
different illness trajectories despite the differing survival
patterns among trajectories. Frailty indexes may be useful
to assess end-of-
life
older people, regardless of their
trajectory.
Tipus de document
Article
Llengua
Anglès
Paraules clau
Fragilitat
Persones grans
Final de la vida
Pàgines
8 p.
Publicat per
BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
Citació
Amblàs-Novellas, J., Murray, S.A., Oller, R., Torné, A., Martori, J.C., Moine, S., Latorre-Vallbona, N., Espaulella, J., Santaeugènia, S.J., Gómez-Batiste, X. (2021) Frailty degree and illness trajectories in older people towards the end-of-life: A prospective observational study. BMJ Open, 11(4). https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-042645
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