Abstract

Globally, geriatric patients are the dominant population requiring global medical care. We established a frailty index for geriatric trauma patients by retrospectively analysing electronic hospital records to identify patients with frailty characteristics and poor prognostic outcomes. Data were obtained from 2016 US National Emergency Department Sample and Shanghai Trauma Emergency Medical Association (2015-18). Overall, 141,267 hospitalised geriatric trauma patients (age ≥ 65years) were included. We used a three-step method to construct geriatric trauma frailty index (GTFI) based on the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision diagnostic codes. Systematic cluster analysis was used. The accuracy of GTFI was verified in national validation cohort, and its applicability to Chinese patients was assessed in local validation cohort. In development cohort (n = 28,179), frail patients had longer lengths of stay and higher Charlson co-morbidity index than non-frail patients (18.2 ± 12.4days, 5.59 ± 2.0 versus 5.3 ± 5.3days, 5.33 ± 1.8, respectively). In national validation cohort (n = 113,089), frail patients had longer lengths of stay (8.5 ± 8.8days versus 4.5 ± 3.1days) and higher in-hospital mortality than non-frail patients (2,795, 11.69% versus 589, 0.66%). Areas under the curves for GTFI for length of stay (>14days) and in-hospital mortality were 0.848 (0.841, 0.854) and 0.885 (0.880, 0.891) in national validation cohort, and were 0.791 (0.779, 0.804) and 0.903 (0.885, 0.922) in local validation cohort (n = 14,827). The GTFI helps hospitals and emergency departments to identify geriatric trauma patients with poor prognostic outcomes, and has been proven to be useful in China.

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