Reliability of the Frailty Index Among Community-Dwelling Older Adults

Author:

Stolz Erwin1ORCID,Mayerl Hannes1ORCID,Godin Judith2ORCID,Hoogendijk Emiel O3ORCID,Theou Olga4ORCID,Freidl Wolfgang1ORCID,Rockwood Kenneth5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Social Medicine and Epidemiology, Medical University of Graz , Graz , Austria

2. Geriatric Medicine, Dalhousie University and Nova Scotia Health , Halifax, Nova Scotia , Canada

3. Department of Epidemiology & Data Science, Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute, Amsterdam UMC-Location VU University Medical Center , Amsterdam , The Netherlands

4. School of Physiotherapy, Geriatric Medicine, Dalhousie University , Halifax, Nova Scotia , Canada

5. Geriatric Medicine, Department of Medicine, Dalhousie University and Nova Scotia Health , Halifax, Nova Scotia , Canada

Abstract

Abstract Background Consistent and reproducible estimates of the underlying true level of frailty are essential for risk stratification and monitoring of health changes. The purpose of this study is to examine the reliability of the frailty index (FI). Methods A total of 426 community-dwelling older adults from the FRequent health Assessment In Later life (FRAIL70+) study in Austria were interviewed biweekly up to 7 times. Two versions of the FI, one with 49 deficits (baseline), and another with 44 (follow-up) were created. Internal consistency was assessed using confirmatory factor analysis and coefficient omega. Test–retest reliability was assessed with Pearson correlation coefficients and the intraclass correlation coefficient. Measurement error was assessed with the standard error of measurement, limits of agreement, and smallest detectable change. Results Participants (64.6% women) were on average 77.2 (±5.4) years old with mean FI49 at a baseline of 0.19 (±0.14). Internal consistency (coefficient omega) was 0.81. Correlations between biweekly FI44 assessments ranged between 0.86 and 0.94 and reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient) was 0.88. The standard error of measurement was 0.05, and the smallest detectable change and upper limits of agreement were 0.13; the latter is larger than previously reported minimal clinically meaningful changes. Conclusions Both internal consistency and reliability of the FI were good, that is, the FI differentiates well between community-dwelling older adults, which is an important requirement for risk stratification for both group-level oriented research and patient-level clinical purposes. Measurement error, however, was large, suggesting that individual health deteriorations or improvements, cannot be reliably detected for FI changes smaller than 0.13.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging

Reference56 articles.

1. Frailty in elderly people;Clegg,2013

2. Trajectories of frailty among Chinese older people in Hong Kong between 2001 and 2012: an age-period-cohort analysis;Yu,2018

3. Trends in frailty and its association with mortality: results from the longitudinal aging study Amsterdam, 1995–2016;Hoogendijk,2021

4. Frailty: implications for clinical practice and public health;Hoogendijk,2019

5. Frailty in relation to the accumulation of deficits;Rockwood,2007

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