Frailty, multimorbidity patterns and mortality in institutionalized older adults in Italy

TitleFrailty, multimorbidity patterns and mortality in institutionalized older adults in Italy
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsDamiano C., Onder G., Zazzara M.B, Carfi A., Zucchelli A., Marengoni A., Vetrano D.L
JournalAging Clinical and Experimental Research
Volume34
Issue12
Pagination3123-3130
Keywords*Frailty, *institutionalized elderly, *Mortality, *multiple chronic conditions, Adult, Aged, article, atrial fibrillation, Cerebrovascular disease, Chronic Disease, chronic obstructive lung disease, controlled study, daily life activity, dementia, depression, diabetes mellitus, disease severity, Female, follow up, functional status, hearing impairment, heart arrhythmia, heart disease, heart failure, hip fracture, Human, hypertension, ischemic heart disease, major clinical study, Male, malignant neoplasm, mental disease, mortality risk, musculoskeletal disease, neurologic disease, nursing home, osteoarthritis, parkinson disease, principal component analysis, proportional hazards model, reference value, schizophrenia, sensory dysfunction, skin ulcer, thyroid disease, visual impairment
Abstract

Background: Little is known on how frailty influences clinical outcomes in persons with specific multimorbidity patterns. Aim(s): To investigate the interplay between multimorbidity and frailty in the association with mortality in older individuals living in nursing homes (NH). Method(s): We considered 4,131 NH residents aged 60 years and over, assessed through the interRAI LTCF instrument between 2014 and 2018. Follow-up was until 2019. Considering four multimorbidity patterns identified via principal component analysis, subjects were stratified in tertiles (T) with respect to their loading values. Frailty Index (FI) considered 23 variables and a cut-off of 0.24 distinguished between high and low frailty levels. For each pattern, all possible combinations of tertiles and FI were evaluated. Their association (Hazard Ratio [HR] and 95% confidence interval) with mortality was tested in Cox regression models. Result(s): In the heart diseases and dementia and sensory impairments patterns, the hazard of death increases progressively with patterns expression and frailty severity (being HR T3 vs. T1 = 2.36 [2.01-2.78]; HR T3 vs. T1 = 2.12 [1.83-2.47], respectively). In heart, respiratory and psychiatric diseases and diabetes, musculoskeletal and vascular diseases patterns, frailty seems to have a stronger impact on mortality than patterns' expression. Discussion(s): Frailty increases mortality risk in all the patterns and provides additional prognostic information in NH residents with different multimorbidity patterns. Conclusion(s): These findings support the need to routinely assess frailty. Older people affected by specific groups of chronic diseases need a specific care approach and have high risk of negative health outcomes.Copyright © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.

DOI10.1007/s40520-022-02269-8
Short TitleAging clinical and experimental research