Associations between multimorbidity and frailty transitions among older Americans

Author:

Luo Yan12,Chen Yuming12,Wang Kaipeng3,De Fries Carson M.3,Huang Ziting12,Xu Huiwen12,Yang Zhou12,Hu Yonghua12,Xu Beibei2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health Peking University Beijing China

2. Medical Informatics Center Peking University Beijing China

3. Graduate School of Social Work University of Denver Denver CO USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe associations of multimorbidity patterns with transitions between frailty states remain unclear in older individuals.MethodsWe used data from the National Health and Aging Trends Study 2011–2019. Frailty was measured annually using the Fried frailty phenotype. Multimorbidity patterns at baseline were identified using latent class analysis based on 14 chronic conditions. We used the semi‐Markov multi‐state model to investigate the influences of multimorbidity characterized by condition counts and patterns on subsequent frailty transitions over follow‐ups.ResultsAmong 9450 participants aged ≥65 years at baseline, 34.8% were non‐frail, 48.1% were pre‐frail and 17.0% were frail. Over a median follow‐up of 4.0 years, 16 880 frailty transitions were observed, with 10 527 worsening and 6353 improving. For 7675 participants with multimorbidity, four multimorbidity patterns were identified: osteoarticular pattern (62.4%), neuropsychiatric–sensory pattern (17.2%), cardiometabolic pattern (10.3%) and complex multimorbidity pattern (10.1%). Compared with no disease, multimorbidity was significantly associated with an increased risk of worsening transitions, including from non‐frail to pre‐frail (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.35; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.21–1.52), from non‐frail to frail (HR = 1.68; 95% CI = 1.04–2.73), from pre‐frail to frail (HR = 2.19; 95% CI = 1.66–2.90) and from pre‐frail to death (HR = 1.64; 95% CI = 1.11–2.41). Compared with the osteoarticular pattern, neuropsychiatric–sensory, cardiometabolic and complex multimorbidity patterns had a significantly higher risk of worsening frailty (all P < 0.05).ConclusionsMultimorbidity was associated with dynamic transitions between frailty states and death among older American adults, and the associations varied across multimorbidity patterns. The findings could offer significant implications for public health policymakers in planning interventions and healthcare resources. They also might inform clinicians regarding providing targeted clinical treatment and health management based on multimorbidity patterns of older people.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

Reference40 articles.

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3. Frailty in Older Adults: Evidence for a Phenotype

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