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The prevalence of frailty among acute stroke patients, and evaluation of method of assessment.

Authors :
Taylor-Rowan M
Cuthbertson G
Keir R
Shaw R
Drozdowska B
Elliott E
Stott D
Quinn TJ
Source :
Clinical rehabilitation [Clin Rehabil] 2019 Oct; Vol. 33 (10), pp. 1688-1696. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Apr 10.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Objective: We aimed to determine prevalence of pre-stroke frailty in acute stroke and describe validity of a Frailty Index-based assessment.<br />Design: Cross-sectional.<br />Setting: Single UK urban teaching hospital.<br />Subjects: Consecutive acute stroke unit admissions, recruited in four waves (May 2016-August 2018). We performed the assessments within first week and attempted to include all admissions.<br />Main Measures: Our primary measure was a Frailty Index, based on cumulative disorders. A proportion of participants were also assessed with the 'Frail non-disabled' questionnaire. We evaluated concurrent validity of Frailty Index against variables associated with frailty in non-stroke populations. We described predictive validity of Frailty Index for stroke severity and delirium. We described convergent validity, quantifying agreement between frailty assessments and a measure of pre-stroke disability (modified Rankin Scale) using kappa statistics and correlations.<br />Results: We included 546 patients. A Frailty Index-defined frailty syndrome was observed in 427 of 545 patients (78%), of whom, 151 (28%) had frank frailty and 276 (51%) were pre-frail. Phenotypic frailty was observed in 72 of 258 patients (28%). We demonstrated concurrent validity via significant associations with all variables (all p  < 0.01). We demonstrated predictive validity for stroke severity and delirium ( p  < 0.01). Agreement between the frailty measures was poor (kappa = -0.06) and convergent validity was moderate (Frail non-disabled 'Cramer's V' = 0.25; modified Rankin Scale 'Cramer's V' = 0.47).<br />Conclusion: Frailty is present in around one in four patients with acute stroke; if pre-frailty is included, then a frailty syndrome is seen in three out of four patients. The Frailty Index is a valid measure of frailty in stroke; however, there is little agreement between this scale and other measurements of frailty.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1477-0873
Volume :
33
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical rehabilitation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30971115
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0269215519841417