Frontiers in Medicine (Nov 2021)

The Functional Trajectory in Frail Compared With Non-frail Critically Ill Patients During the Hospital Stay

  • K. E. Fuest,
  • Marco Lorenz,
  • Marco Lorenz,
  • Julius J. Grunow,
  • Björn Weiss,
  • Rudolf Mörgeli,
  • Sebastian Finkenzeller,
  • Ralph Bogdanski,
  • Markus Heim,
  • Barbara Kapfer,
  • Silja Kriescher,
  • Charlotte Lingg,
  • Jan Martin,
  • Bernhard Ulm,
  • Bettina Jungwirth,
  • Bettina Jungwirth,
  • Manfred Blobner,
  • Manfred Blobner,
  • Stefan J. Schaller,
  • Stefan J. Schaller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2021.748812
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Background: Long-term outcome is determined not only by the acute critical illness but increasingly by the reduced functional reserve of pre-existing frailty. The patients with frailty currently account for one-third of the critically ill, resulting in higher mortality. There is evidence of how frailty affects the intrahospital functional trajectory of critically ill patients since prehospital status is often missing.Methods: In this prospective single-center cohort study at two interdisciplinary intensive care units (ICUs) at a university hospital in Germany, the frailty was assessed using the Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS) in the adult patients with critical illness with an ICU stay >24 h. The functional status was assessed using the sum of the subdomains “Mobility” and “Transfer” of the Barthel Index (MTB) at three time points (pre-hospital, ICU discharge, and hospital discharge).Results: We included 1,172 patients with a median age of 75 years, of which 290 patients (25%) were frail. In a propensity score-matched cohort, the probability of MTB deterioration till hospital discharge did not differ in the patients with frailty (odds ratio (OR) 1.3 [95% CI 0.8–1.9], p = 0.301), confirmed in several sensitivity analyses in all the patients and survivors only.Conclusion: The patients with frailty have a reduced functional status. Their intrahospital functional trajectory, however, was not worse than those in non-frail patients, suggesting a rehabilitation potential of function in critically ill patients with frailty.

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