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Frailty among chronic kidney disease patients on the kidney transplant waiting list: the sex–frailty paradox

Authors :
Pérez-Sáez, María José
Arias Cabrales, Carlos Enrique
Dávalos Yerovi, Vanesa
Redondo Pachón, María Dolores
Faura, Anna
Vera, María
Bach-Pascual, Anna
Pedreira Robles, Guillermo
Junyent-Iglesias, Ernestina
Crespo Barrio, Marta
Marco, Ester
Rodríguez-Mañas, Leocadio
Pascual Santos, Julio
FRAIL-MAR Study Group
Source :
Clinical Kidney Journal
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

Background Frailty is defined as decreased physiologic reserve and resistance to stressors that predisposes patients towards poor health results. Its prevalence in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients who are kidney transplant (KT) candidates is high. Frailty is associated with a higher rate of complications and mortality after transplant. It is unknown whether frailty phenotype differs depending on sex in this population. Methods This was a prospective longitudinal study of 455 KT candidates evaluated for frailty by physical frailty phenotype at the time of inclusion on the KT waiting list. Pre-frailty was defined as the presence of two criteria and frailty as three or more criteria. Univariate and multivariate analyses searched for associations of frailty status, frailty components and gender differences. Results Thirty percent of the total cohort resulted to be pre-frail (20%) or frail (10.3%), but disparities were observed between sexes, with 22.5% of men and 47.2% of women falling into one of these categories. Among frailty criteria, women presented with a higher percentage of exhaustion (39.6% versus 17%) and slowness (22.2% versus 9.6%) compared with men. Comorbidity burden was higher among frail men, whereas social factors were poorer between frail women. Disability was common among those patients who were frail, both men and women. Conclusions Frailty is twice as frequent in advanced CKD women as men. Frailty criteria distribution and phenotype seem to differ among sexes, which might have implications in terms of specific and individualized interventions to improve their status before transplantation.<br />GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT Graphical Abstract

Details

ISSN :
20488513 and 20488505
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Kidney Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fb1e9d86f4533dd8f699b04b5cafbe7c