The role of illness acuity on the association between frailty and mortality in emergency department patients referred to internal medicine

Author:

Pulok Mohammad Habibullah1ORCID,Theou Olga12,van der Valk Alexandra M1,Rockwood Kenneth13

Affiliation:

1. Geriatric Medicine Research, Nova Scotia Health Authority, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

2. School of Physiotherapy, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

3. Divisions of Geriatric Medicine & Neurology, Dalhousie University & Nova Scotia Health Authority, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundwe investigated whether two frailty tools predicted mortality among emergency department (ED) patients referred to internal medicine and how the level of illness acuity influenced any association between frailty and mortality.Methodstwo tools, embedded in a Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA), were the clinical frailty scale (CFS) and a 57-item deficit accumulation frailty index (FI-CGA). Illness acuity was assessed using the Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale (CTAS). We examined all-cause 30-day and 6-month mortality and time to death.Resultsin 808 ED patients (mean age ± SD 80.8 ± 8.8, 54.4% female), the mean FI-CGA score was 0.44 ± 0.14, and the CFS was 5.6 ± 1.6. A minority (307; 38%) were classified as having high acuity (CTAS: 1–2). The 30-day mortality rate was 17%; this increased to 34% at 6 months. Compared to well patients with low acuity, the risk of 30-day mortality was 22.5 times (95% CI: 9.35–62.12) higher for severely frail patients with high acuity; 53% of people with very severe frailty (CFS = 8) and high acuity died within 30 days. When acuity was low, the risk for 30-day mortality was significantly higher only among those with very high levels of frailty (CFS 7–9, FI-CGA > 0.5). When acuity was high, even lower levels of frailty (CFS 5–6, FI-CGA 0.4–0.5) were associated with higher 30-day mortality.Conclusionsacross levels of frailty, higher acuity increased mortality risk. When acuity was low, the risk was significant only when the degree of frailty was high, whereas when acuity was high, even lower levels of frailty were associated with greater mortality risk.

Funder

Canadian Frailty Network

Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Ageing,General Medicine

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