Abstract

Frailty is associated with multiple adverse health outcomes, including mortality. Several methods have been used to characterize frailty, each based on different frailty scales. These include scales based on phenotype, multidomain, and deficit accumulations. Several systematic reviews have examined the association between frailty and mortality; however, it is unclear whether these different frailty scales similarly predict mortality. This umbrella review aims to examine the association between frailty assessed by different frailty scales and all-cause mortality among community-dwelling older adults. A protocol was registered at PROSPERO, and it was conducted following the PRISMA statement. MEDLINE, Embase, PubMed, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) EBP database, and Web of Science database was searched. Methodological quality was assessed using the JBI critical appraisal checklist and online AMSTAR-2 critical appraisal checklist. For eligible studies, essential information was extracted and synthesized qualitatively. Five systematic reviews were included, with a total of 434,115 participants. Three systematic reviews focused on single frailty scales; one evaluated Fried's physical frailty phenotype and its modifications; another focused on the deficit accumulation frailty index. The third evaluated the FRAIL (Fatigue, Resistance, Ambulation, Illness, and Loss of weight) scale. The two other systematic reviews determined the association between frailty and mortality using different frailty scales. All of the systematic reviews found that frailty was significantly associated with all-cause mortality. This umbrella review demonstrates that frailty is a significant predictor of all-cause mortality, irrespective of the specific frailty scale.

Highlights

  • Frailty is associated with multiple adverse health outcomes, including mortality

  • Three systematic reviews focused on single frailty scales; one evaluated Fried physical frailty phenotype and its modifications; another focused on the deficit accumulation frailty index

  • This umbrella review demonstrates that frailty is a significant predictor of all-cause mortality, irrespective of the specific frailty scale

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Summary

Introduction

Frailty is associated with multiple adverse health outcomes, including mortality. Several methods have been used to characterize frailty, each based on different frailty scales. In 2013, a consensus statement by six major international scientific societies defined frailty as a medical syndrome with multiple causes and contributors that is characterized by diminished strength, endurance, and reduced physiologic function and increases an individual's vulnerability for developing disability, dependency, or death [7, 8]. In this definition, frailty is viewed as firstly, a clinical entity different from disability, sarcopenia, or multimorbidity; secondly, it affects a person's physical or cognitive domains; and it is considered as a dynamic state, which can improve or deteriorate over time [7]. An intermediate or 'prefrail' stage has been recognized [3, 9, 10]

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