Correlations, agreement and utility of frailty instruments in prevalent haemodialysis patients: baseline cohort data from the FITNESS study

Author:

Anderson Benjamin M12ORCID,Qasim Muhammad13,Correa Gonzalo4,Evison Felicity5,Gallier Suzy56,Ferro Charles J17ORCID,Jackson Thomas A28ORCID,Sharif Adnan13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nephrology and Transplantation, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, UK

2. Institute of Inflammation and Ageing, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

3. Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

4. Department of Nephrology, Hospital del Salvador, Santiago, Chile

5. Department of Health Informatics, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, UK

6. PIONEER: HDR-UK hub in Acute Care, Birmingham, UK

7. Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

8. Department of Healthcare for Older People, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, UK

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Frailty is associated with poor outcomes for haemodialysis patients, but its prevalence is uncertain due to heterogeneous definitions. The aim of this study was to compare and contrast prevalence and features of commonly used frailty instruments in a British haemodialysis cohort. Methods The FITNESS (Frailty Intervention Trial iN End-Stage patientS on haemodialysis) study recruited adults aged ≥18 years after informed consent, with ≥3 months haemodialysis exposure and no hospital admission within 4 weeks unless for dialysis access. Study participants were clinically phenotyped with frailty instruments including the Frailty Index (FI), Frailty Phenotype (FP), Edmonton Frailty Scale (EFS) and Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS), alongside comprehensive baseline data collection of biochemical, clinical and social characteristics. Results Between 12 January 2018 and 18 April 2019, 485 haemodialysis patients were recruited. Baseline demographics were median age 63 years, male sex 58.6% and non-White ethnicity 42.1%. Prevalence of frailty was high; 41.9% of participants were frail by FP, 63.3% by FI, 50.2% by EFS and 53.8% by CFS. Female gender was associated with increased frailty, with no independent association observed with age or ethnicity. While correlation between frailty instruments was strong, intraclass correlation coefficient for frailty agreement was 0.628 (95% confidence interval 0.585–0.669) and only weak agreement between instrument pairs. Conclusion Frailty is highly prevalent among haemodialysis patients regardless of criteria used. However, our data suggest caution when interpreting heterogenous definitions of frailty for haemodialysis patients as they are not interchangeable. Consensus agreement on the optimal frailty definition for haemodialysis patients must balance ease of use with predictive ability for adverse outcomes before determining clinical application.

Funder

Queen Elizabeth Hospital Charity

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Transplantation,Nephrology

Reference31 articles.

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