Predictors of Frailty Transitions in Mexican Older Adults

Author:

Rivera-Almaraz Ana1ORCID,Salinas-Rodríguez Aarón1ORCID,Gutiérrez-Peña Eduardo2,Manrique-Espinoza Betty Soledad1

Affiliation:

1. National Institute of Public Health , Cuernavaca, Morelos , Mexico

2. Department of Probability and Statistics, IIMAS, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México , Mexico City , Mexico

Abstract

Abstract Background Frailty is a dynamic state in older adults. Current evidence, mostly in high-income countries, found that improving frailty is more likely in mild states (prefrailty). We aimed to determine the probability of frailty transitions and their predictors. Methods Participants were adults aged 50 years or over from the Study on Global Ageing and Adult Health in Mexico during 4 waves (2009, 2014, 2017, and 2021). We defined frailty with the frailty phenotype and we used multinomial logistic models to estimate the probabilities of frailty transitions and determine their predictors. Results For the 3 analyzed periods (2009–2014, 2014–2017, and 2017–2021), transition probabilities from frail to robust were higher for the younger age group (50–59 years) at 0.20, 0.26, and 0.20, and lower for the older age group (≥80 years), 0.03, 0.08 and 0.04. Transitioning from prefrail to robust had probabilities of 0.38, 0.37, and 0.35, for the younger age group, and 0.09, 0.18, and 0.10, for the older age group. The probabilities of transitioning to frail and to death were lower for the younger age group and for the robust at baseline; but higher for the older age group and for the frail at baseline. We identified age, disability, and diabetes as the most significant predictors of frailty transitions. Conclusions These findings show that frailty has a dynamic nature and that a significant proportion of prefrail and frail individuals can recover to a robust or prefrail state. They also emphasize that prefrailty should be the focus of interventions.

Funder

World Health Organization

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference20 articles.

1. Health, functioning, and disability in older adults—present status and future implications;Chatterji,2015

2. The physical frailty syndrome as a transition from homeostatic symphony to cacophony;Fried,2021

3. Frailty in older adults: evidence for a phenotype;Fried,2001

4. Transitions between frailty states among community-dwelling older people: a systematic review and meta-analysis;Kojima,2019

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