Influence of preoperative frailty on quality of life after cardiac surgery: A systematic review and meta‐analysis

Author:

Fehlmann Christophe A.123ORCID,Bezzina Kathryn4,Mazzola Rosetta5,Visintini Sarah M.6ORCID,Guo Ming Hao7,Rubens Fraser D.17,Wells George A.18,McGuinty Caroline5,Huang Allen9ORCID,Khoury Lara9,Boczar Kevin Emery1510ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Epidemiology and Public Health University of Ottawa Ottawa Ontario Canada

2. Ottawa Hospital Research Institute Ottawa Ontario Canada

3. Division of Emergency Medicine Geneva University Hospitals Geneva Switzerland

4. Care of the Elderly Program Élisabeth Bruyère Hospital Ottawa Ontario Canada

5. University of Ottawa Heart Institute Ottawa Ontario Canada

6. Berkman Library University of Ottawa Heart Institute Ottawa Ontario Canada

7. Department of Cardiac Surgery University of Ottawa Heart Institute Ottawa Ontario Canada

8. Research Methods Centre University of Ottawa Heart Institute Ottawa Ontario Canada

9. Division of Geriatric Medicine The Ottawa Hospital Ottawa Ontario Canada

10. Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundFrailty has emerged as an important prognostic marker of increased mortality after cardiac surgery, but its association with quality of life (QoL) and patient‐centered outcomes is not fully understood. We sought to evaluate the association between frailty and such outcomes in older patients undergoing cardiac surgery.MethodsThis systematic review included studies evaluating the effect of preoperative frailty on QoL outcomes after cardiac surgery amongst patients 65 years and older. The primary outcome was patient's perceived change in QoL following cardiac surgery. Secondary outcomes included residing in a long‐term care facility for 1 year, readmission in the year following the intervention, and discharge destination. Screening, inclusion, data extraction, and quality assessment were performed independently by two reviewers. Meta‐analyses based on the random‐effects model were conducted. The evidential quality of findings was assessed with the GRADE profiler.ResultsAfter the identification of 3105 studies, 10 observational studies were included (1580 patients) in the analysis. Two studies reported on the change in QoL following cardiac surgery, which was higher for patients with frailty than for patients without. Preoperative frailty was associated with both hospital readmission (pooled odds ratio [OR] 1.48 [0.80–2.74], low GRADE level) as well as non‐home discharge (pooled OR 3.02 [1.57–5.82], moderate GRADE level).ConclusionWhile evidence in this field is limited by heterogeneity of frailty assessment and non‐randomized data, we demonstrated that baseline frailty may possibly be associated with improved QoL, but with increased readmission as well as discharge to a non‐home destination following cardiac surgery. These patient‐centered outcomes are important factors when considering interventional options for older patients.Study RegistrationOSF registries (https://osf.io/vm2p8).

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology

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