Abstract

Background: Prompt and efficient identification and stratification of patients who are frail is important, as this cohort are at high risk of adverse healthcare outcomes. Numerous frailty screening tools have been developed to support their identification across different settings, yet relatively few have emerged for use in emergency departments (EDs). This protocol provides details for a systematic review aiming to synthesize the accumulated evidence regarding the diagnostic accuracy and clinimetric properties of frailty screening instruments to identify frail older adults in EDs. Methods: Six electronic databases will be searched from January 2000 to March 2021. Eligible studies will include adults aged ≥60 years screened in EDs with any available screening instrument to identify frailty (even if not originally designed for this purpose). Studies, including case-control, longitudinal, and cohort studies, will be included, where instruments are compared to a reference standard to explore diagnostic accuracy. Predictive accuracy for a selection of outcomes, including mortality, institutionalization, and readmission, will be assessed. Clinical and methodological heterogeneity will be examined, and a random effects meta-analysis performed if appropriate. Conclusion: Understanding whether frailty screening on presentation to EDs is accurate in identifying frailty, and predicting these outcomes is important for decision-making and targeting appropriate management.

Highlights

  • Population ageing is challenging health-care systems worldwide

  • Given the importance of, and challenges associated with, identifying frailty in emergency departments (EDs), the systematic review and meta-analysis described in this study protocol aims to: (1) review the evidence regarding the diagnostic accuracy to identify frailty and subsequent risk of adverse outcomes, and (2) to evaluate the clinimetric properties of current frailty screening tools and brief frailty-oriented risk-stratification instruments used in EDs for older people

  • This systematic review and, if applicable, meta-analysis, will identify studies that have reported on validated screening instruments among older adults in ED settings, examining the properties of those used to identify older adults as frail, including those not designed originally to measure frailty, but which are used for this purpose, e.g., short risk-prediction instruments [27]

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Summary

Introduction

Population ageing is challenging health-care systems worldwide. Between 2015 and2050, the world’s population of older people is projected to triple, resulting in more olderInt. Numerous frailty screening tools have been developed to support their identification across different settings, yet relatively few have emerged for use in emergency departments (EDs). This protocol provides details for a systematic review aiming to synthesize the accumulated evidence regarding the diagnostic accuracy and clinimetric properties of frailty screening instruments to identify frail older adults in EDs. Methods: Six electronic databases will be searched from January 2000 to March 2021. Conclusion: Understanding whether frailty screening on presentation to EDs is accurate in identifying frailty, and predicting these outcomes is important for decision-making and targeting appropriate management

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