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. 2021 Feb 5;21(1):111.
doi: 10.1186/s12877-021-02049-5.

Frailty and hospitalization-associated disability after pneumonia: A prospective cohort study

Affiliations

Frailty and hospitalization-associated disability after pneumonia: A prospective cohort study

Chan Mi Park et al. BMC Geriatr. .

Abstract

Background: Pneumonia 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.

Methods: A 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 ≥ 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.

Results: The 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.

Conclusions: Older 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.

Keywords: Disability; Frailty; Hospitalization‐associated disability; Pneumonia.

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Conflict of interest statement

DHK provides paid consultative services to Alosa Health, a nonprofit educational organization with no relationship to any drug or device manufacturers. He also receives research grants from National Institute on Aging for unrelated projects. The other authors declare no competing interests.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Selection of Study Population
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Prevalence of Disability Before and After Pneumonia Hospitalization by Frailty Level on Admission
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Risk of Death or Functional Decline at 30 days by Frailty and Pneumonia Severity. The risk (vertical bar) of death or functional decline was presented for frail (red bar; frailty index ≥0.25) vs non-frail (blue bar; frailty index <0.25) patients with low pneumonia severity (CURB-65 0-2 points) vs high pneumonia severity (CURB-65 3-5 points)

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