Journal of International Medical Research (Sep 2024)

Preoperative frailty and postoperative complications after non-cardiac surgery: a systematic review

  • Ángel Becerra-Bolaños,
  • Yanira Hernández-Aguiar,
  • Aurelio Rodríguez-Pérez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/03000605241274553
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 52

Abstract

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Objective Many tools have been used to assess frailty in the perioperative setting. However, no single scale has been shown to be the most effective in predicting postoperative complications. We evaluated the relationship between several frailty scales and the occurrence of complications following different non-cardiac surgeries. Methods This systematic review was registered in PROSPERO (CRD42023473401). The search strategy included PubMed, Google Scholar, and Embase, covering manuscripts published from January 2000 to July 2023. We included prospective and retrospective studies that evaluated frailty using specific scales and tracked patients postoperatively. Studies on cardiac, neurosurgical, and thoracic surgery were excluded because of the impact of underlying diseases on patients’ functional status. Narrative reviews, conference abstracts, and articles lacking a comprehensive definition of frailty were excluded. Results Of the 2204 articles identified, 145 were included in the review: 7 on non-cardiac surgery, 36 on general and digestive surgery, 19 on urology, 22 on vascular surgery, 36 on spinal surgery, and 25 on orthopedic/trauma surgery. The reviewed manuscripts confirmed that various frailty scales had been used to predict postoperative complications, mortality, and hospital stay across these surgical disciplines. Conclusion Despite differences among surgical populations, preoperative frailty assessment consistently predicts postoperative outcomes in non-cardiac surgeries.