Frailty Index and functional level upon admission predict hospital outcomes: an interRAI-based cohort study of older patients in post-acute care hospitals

TitleFrailty Index and functional level upon admission predict hospital outcomes: an interRAI-based cohort study of older patients in post-acute care hospitals
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsKerminen H, Huhtala H, Jantti P, Valvanne J, Jamsen E
JournalBMC Geriatrics
Volume20
Issue1
Pagination160
Date PublishedMay 5
ISBN Number1471-2318 (Electronic)<br/>1471-2318 (Linking)
Accession Number32370740
Keywords*Aftercare, *Frail Elderly, Activities of Daily Living, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Critical Care/methods, Female, Frailty, Frailty index, Frailty/*diagnosis/epidemiology, Functional ability, Geriatric Assessment, Geriatric Assessment/*methods, Hospital outcomes, Humans, Inpatients, length of stay, Older people, post-acute care, Retrospective Studies
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Geriatric assessment upon admission may reveal factors that contribute to adverse outcomes in hospitalized older patients. The purposes of this study were to derive a Frailty Index (FI-PAC) from the interRAI Post-Acute Care instrument (interRAI-PAC) and to analyse the predictive ability of the FI-PAC and interRAI scales for hospital outcomes. METHODS: This retrospective cohort study was conducted by combining patient data from interRAI-PAC with discharge records from two post-acute care hospitals. The FI-PAC was derived from 57 variables that fulfilled the Frailty Index criteria. Associations of the FI-PAC and interRAI-PAC scales (ADLH for activities of daily living, CPS for cognition, DRS for mood, and CHESS for stability of health status) with hospital outcomes (prolonged hospital stay >/=90 days, emergency department admission during the stay, and in-hospital mortality) were analysed using logistic regression and ROC curves. RESULTS: The cohort included 2188 patients (mean age (SD) 84.7 (6.3) years) who were hospitalized in two post-acute care hospitals. Most patients (n = 1691, 77%) were discharged and sent home. Their median length of stay was 35 days (interquartile range 18-87 days), and 409 patients (24%) had a prolonged hospital stay. During their stay, 204 patients (9%) were admitted to the emergency department and 231 patients (11%) died. The FI-PAC was normally distributed (mean (SD) 0.34 (0.15)). Each increase of 0.1 point in the FI-PAC increased the likelihood of prolonged hospital stay (odds ratio [95% CI] 1.91 [1.73 horizontal line 2.09]), emergency admission (1.24 [1.11 horizontal line 1.37]), and in-hospital death (1.82 [1.63 horizontal line 2.03]). The best instruments for predicting prolonged hospital stay and in-hospital mortality were the FI-PAC and the ADLH scale (AUC 0.75 vs 0.72 and 0.73 vs 0.73, respectively). There were no differences in the predictive abilities of interRAI scales and the FI-PAC for emergency department admission. CONCLUSIONS: The Frailty Index derived from interRAI-PAC predicts adverse hospital outcomes. Its predictive ability was similar to that of the ADLH scale, whereas other interRAI-PAC scales had less predictive value. In clinical practice, assessment of functional ability is a simple way to assess a patient's prognosis.

DOI10.1186/s12877-020-01550-7
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The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

PMCID

PMC7201739

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32370740https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7201739/pdf/12877_2020_Arti...