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Cited 26 time in webofscience Cited 26 time in scopus
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Frailty and hospitalization-associated disability after pneumonia: A prospective cohort study

Authors
Park, Chan MiKim, WonsockRhim, Hye ChangLee, Eun SikKim, Jong HunCho, Kyung HwanKim, Dae Hyun
Issue Date
5-Feb-2021
Publisher
BMC
Keywords
Frailty; Pneumonia; Disability; Hospitalization-associated disability
Citation
BMC GERIATRICS, v.21, no.1
Indexed
SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
BMC GERIATRICS
Volume
21
Number
1
URI
https://scholarworks.korea.ac.kr/kumedicine/handle/2020.sw.kumedicine/52119
DOI
10.1186/s12877-021-02049-5
ISSN
1471-2318
1471-2318
Abstract
BackgroundPneumonia is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in older adults. The role of frailty assessment in older adults with pneumonia is not well defined. Our purpose of the study was to investigate 30-day clinical course and functional outcomes of pneumonia in older adults with different levels of frailty.MethodsA prospective cohort was conducted at a university hospital in Seoul, Korea with 176 patients who were 65 years or older and hospitalized with pneumonia. A 50-item deficit-accumulation frailty index (FI) (range: 0-1; robust<0.15, pre-frail 0.15-0.24, mild-to-moderately frail 0.25-0.44, and severely frail<greater than or equal to>0.45) and the pneumonia severity CURB-65 score (range: 0-5) were measured. Primary outcome was death or functional decline, defined as worsening dependencies in 21 daily activities and physical tasks in 30 days. Secondary outcomes were intensive care unit admission, psychoactive drug use, nasogastric tube feeding, prolonged hospitalization (length of stay>15 days), and discharge to a long-term care institution.ResultsThe population had a median age 79 (interquartile range, 75-84) years, 68 (38.6%) female, and 45 (25.5%) robust, 36 (47.4%) pre-frail, 37 (21.0%) mild-to-moderately frail, and 58 (33.0%) severely frail patients. After adjusting for age, sex, and CURB-65, the risk of primary outcome for increasing frailty categories was 46.7%, 61.1%, 83.8%, and 86.2%, respectively (p=0.014). The risk was higher in patients with frailty (FI >= 0.25) than without (FI<0.25) among those with CURB-65 0-2 points (75% vs. 52%; p=0.022) and among those with CURB-65 3-5 points (93% vs. 65%; p=0.007). In addition, patients with greater frailty were more likely to require nasogastric tube feeding (robust vs. severe frailty: 13.9% vs. 60.3%) and prolonged hospitalization (18.2% vs. 50.9%) and discharge to a long-term care institution (4.4% vs. 59.3%) (p<0.05 for all). Rates of intensive care unit admission and psychoactive drug use were similar.ConclusionsOlder adults with frailty experience high rates of death or functional decline in 30 days of pneumonia hospitalization, regardless of the pneumonia severity. These results underscore the importance of frailty assessment in the acute care setting.
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Cho, Kyung Hwan
Anam Hospital (Department of Family Medicine, Anam Hospital)
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