Abstract

BackgroundThe aims of this study were 1) to confirm that combinations of brief geriatric assessment (BGA) items were significant risk factors for prolonged LHS among geriatric patients hospitalized in acute care medical units after their admission to the emergency department (ED); and 2) to determine whether these combinations of BGA items could be used as a prognostic tool of prolonged LHS.MethodsBased on a prospective observational cohort design, 1254 inpatients (mean age ± standard deviation, 84.9±5.9 years; 59.3% female) recruited upon their admission to ED and discharged in acute care medical units of Angers University Hospital, France, were selected in this study. At baseline assessment, a BGA was performed and included the following 6 items: age ≥85years, male gender, polypharmacy (i.e., ≥5 drugs per day), use of home-help services, history of falls in previous 6 months and temporal disorientation (i.e., inability to give the month and/or year). The LHS in acute care medical units was prospectively calculated in number of days using the hospital registry.ResultsArea under receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves of prolonged LHS of different combinations of BGA items ranged from 0.50 to 0.57. Cox regression models revealed that combinations defining a high risk of prolonged LHS, identified from ROC curves, were significant risk factors for prolonged LHS (hazard ratio >1.16 with P>0.010). Kaplan-Meier distributions of discharge showed that inpatients classified in high-risk group of prolonged LHS were discharged later than those in low-risk group (P<0.003). Prognostic value for prolonged LHS of all combinations was poor with sensitivity under 77%, a high variation of specificity (from 26.6 to 97.4) and a low likelihood ratio of positive test under 5.6.ConclusionCombinations of 6-item BGA tool were significant risk factors for prolonged LHS but their prognostic value was poor in the studied sample of older inpatients.

Highlights

  • Older adults are the fastest increasing group of patients admitted to hospital, often through emergency departments (ED) [1,2]

  • Screening of older inpatients at risk of prolonged length of hospital stay (LHS) based on comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) approach is the first step of an adapted care plan of older inpatients because it improves the medical decision-making process, and the care pathway [4,10]

  • We recently showed that different combinations of the 6-item brief CGA (BGA) tool were risk factors for prolonged LHS in a cohort of 424 older patients admitted to acute care medical units following ED discharge [16,17]

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Summary

Introduction

Older adults are the fastest increasing group of patients admitted to hospital, often through emergency departments (ED) [1,2]. Multimorbidity and related-disabilities leading to a high disease burden characterize the older inpatients group [3,4,5]. Screening of older inpatients at risk of prolonged LHS based on CGA approach is the first step of an adapted care plan of older inpatients because it improves the medical decision-making process, and the care pathway [4,10]. The aims of this study were 1) to confirm that combinations of brief geriatric assessment (BGA) items were significant risk factors for prolonged LHS among geriatric patients hospitalized in acute care medical units after their admission to the emergency department (ED); and 2) to determine whether these combinations of BGA items could be used as a prognostic tool of prolonged LHS

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