Using Existing Clinical Data to Measure Older Adult Inpatients' Frailty at Admission and Discharge: Hospital Patient Register Study.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_6AC0881D6467
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Using Existing Clinical Data to Measure Older Adult Inpatients' Frailty at Admission and Discharge: Hospital Patient Register Study.
Journal
JMIR aging
Author(s)
Wernli B., Verloo H., von Gunten A., Pereira F.
ISSN
2561-7605 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2561-7605
Publication state
Published
Issued date
28/10/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
7
Pages
e54839
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: epublish
Abstract
Frailty is a widespread geriatric syndrome among older adults, including hospitalized older inpatients. Some countries use electronic frailty measurement tools to identify frailty at the primary care level, but this method has rarely been investigated during hospitalization in acute care hospitals. An electronic frailty measurement instrument based on population-based hospital electronic health records could effectively detect frailty, frailty-related problems, and complications as well be a clinical alert. Identifying frailty among older adults using existing patient health data would greatly aid the management and support of frailty identification and could provide a valuable public health instrument without additional costs.
We aim to explore a data-driven frailty measurement instrument for older adult inpatients using data routinely collected at hospital admission and discharge.
A retrospective electronic patient register study included inpatients aged ≥65 years admitted to and discharged from a public hospital between 2015 and 2017. A dataset of 53,690 hospitalizations was used to customize this data-driven frailty measurement instrument inspired by the Edmonton Frailty Scale developed by Rolfson et al. A 2-step hierarchical cluster procedure was applied to compute e-Frail-CH (Switzerland) scores at hospital admission and discharge. Prevalence, central tendency, comparative, and validation statistics were computed.
Mean patient age at admission was 78.4 (SD 7.9) years, with more women admitted (28,018/53,690, 52.18%) than men (25,672/53,690, 47.81%). Our 2-step hierarchical clustering approach computed 46,743 inputs of hospital admissions and 47,361 for discharges. Clustering solutions scored from 0.5 to 0.8 on a scale from 0 to 1. Patients considered frail comprised 42.02% (n=19,643) of admissions and 48.23% (n=22,845) of discharges. Within e-Frail-CH's 0-12 range, a score ≥6 indicated frailty. We found a statistically significant mean e-Frail-CH score change between hospital admission (5.3, SD 2.6) and discharge (5.75, SD 2.7; P<.001). Sensitivity and specificity cut point values were 0.82 and 0.88, respectively. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.85. Comparing the e-Frail-CH instrument to the existing Functional Independence Measure (FIM) instrument, FIM scores indicating severe dependence equated to e-Frail-CH scores of ≥9, with a sensitivity and specificity of 0.97 and 0.88, respectively. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.92. There was a strong negative association between e-Frail-CH scores at hospital discharge and FIM scores (r <sub>s</sub> =-0.844; P<.001).
An electronic frailty measurement instrument was constructed and validated using patient data routinely collected during hospitalization, especially at admission and discharge. The mean e-Frail-CH score was higher at discharge than at admission. The routine calculation of e-Frail-CH scores during hospitalization could provide very useful clinical alerts on the health trajectories of older adults and help select interventions for preventing or mitigating frailty.
Keywords
Humans, Aged, Female, Male, Aged, 80 and over, Retrospective Studies, Patient Discharge/statistics & numerical data, Frailty/diagnosis, Frailty/epidemiology, Geriatric Assessment/methods, Frail Elderly/statistics & numerical data, Registries, Inpatients/statistics & numerical data, Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data, Patient Admission/statistics & numerical data, Electronic Health Records/statistics & numerical data, clinical data, cluster analysis, electronic patient records, frailty, frailty assessment, functional independence measure, hierarchical clustering, hospital register, medical records, older adults, patient records, routinely collected data
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
01/11/2024 15:32
Last modification date
02/11/2024 7:11
Usage data