Meyers Brandon M, Al-Shamsi Humaid O, Rask Sara, Yelamanchili Radhika, Phillips Callista M, Papaioannou Alexandra, Pond Gregory R, Jeyabalan Neera, Zbuk Kevin M, Dhesy-Thind Sukhbinder Kaur
Department of Oncology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada.
Simcoe Muskoka Regional Cancer Centre, Barrie, Canada.
J Gastrointest Oncol. 2017 Feb;8(1):32-38. doi: 10.21037/jgo.2016.11.12.
Frailty has been proposed by geriatricians as an indicator of functional age. The Edmonton Frail Scale (EFS) is a 15-point incremental scale; it is quick (<5 min), and simple to administer. We conducted an exploratory study to establish if the EFS add utility to clinician's expertise by determining if there was an association between EFS and receipt of chemotherapy in colorectal cancer (CRC) patients.
The EFS was administered to stage II-IV CRC patients ≥70 years. EFS assessment was completed by one of the investigators, with the treating oncology team blinded to the results.
A total of 46 patients were enrolled, and the EFS was reproduced in 32 patients at two visits (r=0.81; 95% CI: 0.64-0.90, P<0.0001). There was no correlation between the EFS and receipt of chemotherapy for the study population as a whole; however, exclusion of stage II patients showed a reduced likelihood of receiving chemotherapy with higher EFS scores (odds ratio 0.56; 95% CI: 0.37-0.85, P<0.01 per unit increment). A similar effect was observed after multivariable analysis (adjusting for performance status, age, stage and gender, odds ratio 0.41 95% CI: 0.18-0.96, P<0.05 per unit increment).
This exploratory study suggests that EFS can identify patients that oncologists may have thought were too frail for chemotherapy, independent of PS. Therefore, the EFS has the potential to add a reproducible, and quantifiable measure of frailty to the clinician's decision making toolset. A follow up study will employ the EFS in real-time, and determine if using the EFS can minimize complications and unplanned health care utilization in elderly cancer patients.
老年病学家已提出衰弱是功能年龄的一个指标。埃德蒙顿衰弱量表(EFS)是一个15分的递增量表;它快速(<5分钟)且易于实施。我们进行了一项探索性研究,通过确定EFS与结直肠癌(CRC)患者接受化疗之间是否存在关联,来确定EFS是否能为临床医生的专业判断增加价值。
对年龄≥70岁的II-IV期CRC患者进行EFS评估。EFS评估由一名研究人员完成,肿瘤治疗团队对结果不知情。
共纳入46例患者,32例患者在两次访视时EFS结果具有重复性(r=0.81;95%CI:0.64-0.90,P<0.0001)。总体研究人群中,EFS与接受化疗之间无相关性;然而,排除II期患者后,EFS评分越高,接受化疗的可能性越低(优势比0.56;95%CI:0.37-0.85,每单位增量P<0.01)。多变量分析后观察到类似效果(校正体能状态、年龄、分期和性别后,优势比0.41,95%CI:0.18-0.96,每单位增量P<0.05)。
这项探索性研究表明,EFS能够识别出肿瘤学家可能认为过于虚弱而无法接受化疗的患者,且独立于体能状态。因此,EFS有可能为临床医生的决策工具集增加一种可重复且可量化的衰弱测量方法。一项后续研究将实时应用EFS,并确定使用EFS是否能将老年癌症患者的并发症和非计划医疗保健利用率降至最低。