Frailty Trajectories and Its Associated Factors in Japanese Older Adults - 21/11/24
Abstract |
Background |
Associated factors for frailty development according to age group remain unclear.
Objectives |
To identify frailty score trajectories among community-dwelling older Japanese individuals and examine their associated factors.
Design |
13-year longitudinal study.
Setting |
Kusatsu Town in Gunma Prefecture, Japan.
Participants |
1706 older adults aged ≥ 65 years who completed an annual frailty assessment at least once between 2007 and 2019.
Measurements |
Frailty status was determined using an index based on the Fried frailty phenotype criteria. Potential associated factors for frailty trajectory included physical, biological, lifestyle-related, and psychological factors, as well as comorbidities.
Results |
We identified five trajectory patterns in the frailty score from age of 65 to 90 years —individuals who were robust (Group 1, 10.5%) as well as individuals with late-onset frailty (Group 2, 16.1%), middle-onset frailty (Group 3, 25.6% and Group 4, 35.2%), and early-onset frailty (Group 5, 12.7%). Compared with the other groups, the early-onset group showed a higher prevalence of cerebrovascular diseases, bone and joint diseases, poor nutrition, sarcopenia, hospitalization, low cognitive function, and smoking at the end of follow-up. Associated factors in the middle-onset group largely overlapped with those of the early-onset group. The late-onset frailty group tended to have a higher association with heart disease and bone and joint diseases compared with the robust group.
Conclusion |
Our findings from a 13-year longitudinal study identified five frailty trajectory patterns and seven associated factors for frailty trajectory. Proposed effective population-based frailty prevention strategies in each age group may contribute to effective strategies to extend healthy life expectancy in aging, aged, and super-aged communities.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Key words : Associated factor, frailty prevention, population-based strategy
Plan
Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at jfa.2024.51. How to cite this article: Y. Taniguchi, A. Kitamura, T. Hata, et al. Frailty Trajectories and Its Associated Factors in Japanese Older Adults. J Frailty Aging 2024; jfa.2024.51 |
Vol 13 - N° 3
P. 233-239 - août 2024 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.