Clinical Characteristics of Frailty in Japanese Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients - 21/11/24
Abstract |
Objective |
The relationship between clinical characteristics and frailty was investigated in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients >40 years old.
Methods |
RA patients followed for >1 year were interviewed and diagnosed as frail according to a 5-item frailty score index: (1) weight loss >2 kg within 6 months (WL); (2) slower gait speed (GS); (3) exercise less than once per week (EX); (4) decline in short-term memory (SM); and (5) general fatigue in the past 2 weeks (GF). The relationship between frailty status and background parameters was evaluated.
Results |
Among 739 subjects, frail patients comprised 221, pre-frail patients comprised 203, and robust comprised 315. The most common symptom in the Frailty group was GS, followed by SM, GF, EX, and WL, whereas the most common symptom in the Pre-frailty group was GS followed by SM, GF, WL, and EX. Frailty was significantly correlated with aging. Elderly onset rheumatoid arthritis, disease activity, serum C-reactive protein concentration, degree of joint deformity, activities in daily living (ADL), dementia treated, and glucocorticoid steroid administration demonstrated significant correlations with frailty status, although all factors also demonstrated significant correlation with aging. In addition, the EuroQol score (EQ5D) was significantly correlated with both aging and frailty.
Conclusion |
The results suggest that a remission state for disease activity, ADL, and dementia is correlated with frailty. The most common and primary symptom is GS. Elderly RA patients require careful attention for symptoms of frailty, which may damage the EQ5D score, specifically, the quality of life for RA patients.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Key words : Rheumatoid Arthritis, frailty, aging, dementia, quality of life
Plan
Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available for this article at jfa.2020.1 and is accessible for authorized users. |
Vol 9 - N° 3
P. 158-164 - juin 2020 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.