Au Yong Phui Sze Angie, Sim Eileen Yi Lin, Ho Collin Yih Xian, He Yingke, Kwa Charlene Xian Wen, Teo Li Ming, Abdullah Hairil Rizal
Division of Anaesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore, SGP.
Cureus. 2021 May 14;13(5):e15033. doi: 10.7759/cureus.15033.
Introduction Frailty is associated with adverse surgical outcomes. While existing studies describe the prevalence of multimorbidity and frailty in the community, the surgical population may have more severe disease and significant surgical stress. This study aims to describe the distribution of frailty and multimorbidity in the older surgical population and examine if specific comorbidities are more strongly associated with frailty. Methods This is a single-centre retrospective cohort study using an electronic database in the preoperative evaluation clinic, conducted in Singapore General Hospital, Singapore. All patients above 70 years old going for elective non-cardiac surgery were included. Demographics and comorbidities were analysed for their association with frailty according to the Edmonton Frail Scale. Results A total of 1396 out of 1398 patients were analyzed. The overall incidence of frailty was 27.8% and multimorbidity was 63.4%. Factors independently associated with frailty were age (adjusted Odds Ratio [aOR] = 1.07), female gender (aOR = 1.67), type 2 diabetes mellitus (aOR = 1.69), chronic kidney disease (aOR = 1.47), end-stage renal failure (aOR = 3.58), history of cerebrovascular accident or transient ischemic attack (aOR = 1.87), moderate anaemia (aOR = 2.11), dementia (aOR = 6.38), depression (aOR = 3.82), and peptic ulcer disease (aOR = 1.98). The presence of multi-morbidity was significantly associated with frailty, with overall increasing strength of association. Conclusion As the number of comorbidities increases, the odds of frailty increase. Only a small proportion of those with multimorbidity accumulate enough biological deficits to develop frailty, putting them at higher risk than with solely multimorbidity or frailty. Dementia and depression are comorbidities with strong associations that have yet to see coordinated interventional efforts in the preoperative setting.
引言
衰弱与手术不良结局相关。虽然现有研究描述了社区中多种疾病并存和衰弱的患病率,但手术人群可能患有更严重的疾病且面临重大手术应激。本研究旨在描述老年手术人群中衰弱和多种疾病并存的分布情况,并探讨特定合并症是否与衰弱有更强的关联。
方法
这是一项单中心回顾性队列研究,使用新加坡总医院术前评估诊所的电子数据库。纳入所有70岁以上接受择期非心脏手术的患者。根据埃德蒙顿衰弱量表分析人口统计学和合并症与衰弱的关联。
结果
共分析了1398例患者中的1396例。衰弱的总体发生率为27.8%,多种疾病并存的发生率为63.4%。与衰弱独立相关的因素包括年龄(调整后的优势比[aOR]=1.07)、女性(aOR=1.67)、2型糖尿病(aOR=1.69)、慢性肾脏病(aOR=1.47)、终末期肾衰竭(aOR=3.58)、脑血管意外或短暂性脑缺血发作史(aOR=1.87)、中度贫血(aOR=2.11)、痴呆(aOR=6.38)、抑郁(aOR=3.82)和消化性溃疡病(aOR=1.98)。多种疾病并存与衰弱显著相关,且关联强度总体呈上升趋势。
结论
随着合并症数量的增加,衰弱的几率也会增加。只有一小部分患有多种疾病并存的人积累了足够的生物学缺陷而发展为衰弱,这使他们比单纯患有多种疾病并存或衰弱的人面临更高的风险。痴呆和抑郁是具有强关联的合并症,在术前环境中尚未看到协调的干预措施。