Geriatric Assessment Impairment Profiles and Mortality in Older Adults with Gastrointestinal Cancers: Latent Class Analysis of the CARE Registry

Author:

Thai Sydney T1ORCID,Lund Jennifer L1,Kenzik Kelly M2,Poole Charles1,Stürmer Til1,Buse John B13,Harmon Christian A2,Al-Obaidi Mustafa2,Williams Grant R24

Affiliation:

1. Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill , NC, USA

2. Institute for Cancer Outcomes and Survivorship, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham , AL, USA

3. Department of Medicine, University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill , NC, USA

4. Division of Hematology/Oncology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham , AL, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Many older adults with cancer have ≥2 impairments on geriatric assessment which impacts present and future frailty status, treatment tolerability, and outcomes. Our objective was to identify and describe distinct geriatric assessment impairment classes using latent class analysis (LCA) in older patients with gastrointestinal malignancies and assess 1-year mortality. Methods We used the Cancer & Aging Resilience Evaluation (CARE) Study, a registry of older adults (≥60 years) at University of Alabama at Birmingham. The analytic cohort included patients with gastrointestinal malignancies who completed a self-administered geriatric assessment (CARE tool) before chemotherapy and had ≥1 geriatric assessment impairment. Thirteen geriatric assessment impairments were used as indicators in LCA. Resultant classes were described, mortality was estimated, and risk contrasts (differences, hazard ratios) were calculated with 95% confidence intervals. For comparison, estimates were provided for frailty categories (robust, pre-frail, frail) determined from 44 items in the CARE tool. Stratified analyses included high-risk (pancreatic, hepatobiliary, esophageal) vs. low-risk gastrointestinal cancers, and stage (IV vs. I-III). Results Six geriatric assessment impairment classes were identified: Mild impairment (LC1); Social support impairment (LC2); Weight loss alone (LC3); Impaired, low anxiety/depression (LC4); Impaired with anxiety/depression (LC5); Global impairment (LC6). One-year mortality was 14%, 22%, 29%, 34%, 50% and 50% for LC1-LC6, respectively. For frailty categories, estimates ranged from 18% (robust) to 40% (frail). In stratified analyses, LC4-LC6 consistently had higher mortality estimates compared to LC1 Conclusions The 6 geriatric assessment impairment classes showed a wider spread of mortality estimates compared to frailty categories and could be used to identify vulnerable patients and to plan interventions.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging

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