Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Center, Durham VA Health System, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2021 Nov;69(11):3232-3241. doi: 10.1111/jgs.17384. Epub 2021 Jul 29.
Older adults with similar health conditions often experience widely divergent outcomes following health stressors. Variable recovery after a health stressor may be due in part to differences in biological mechanisms at the molecular, cellular, or system level, that are elicited in response to stressors. We describe the PRIME-KNEE study as an example of ongoing research to validate provocative clinical tests and biomarkers that predict resilience to specific health stressors.
PRIME-KNEE is an ongoing, prospective cohort study that will enroll 250 adults ≥60 years undergoing total knee arthroplasty. Data are collected at baseline (pre-surgery), during surgery, daily for 7 days after surgery, and at 1, 2, 4, and 6 months post-surgery. Provocative tests include a cognition-motor dual-task walking test, cerebrovascular reactivity assessed by functional near-infrared spectroscopy, peripheral blood mononuclear cell reactivity ex vivo to lipopolysaccharide toxin and influenza vaccine, and heart rate variability during surgery. Cognitive, psychological, and physical performance batteries are collected at baseline to estimate prestressor reserve. Demographics, medications, comorbidities, and stressor characteristics are abstracted from the electronic medical record and via participant interview. Blood-based biomarkers are collected at baseline and postoperative day 1. Repeated measures after surgery include items from a delirium assessment tool and pain scales administered daily by telephone for 7 days and cognitive change index (participant and informant), lower extremity activities of daily living, pain scales, and step counts assessed by Garmin actigraphy at 1, 2, 4, and 6 months after surgery. Statistical models use these measures to characterize resilience phenotypes and evaluate prestressor clinical indicators associated with poststressor resilience.
If PRIME-KNEE validates feasible clinical tests and biomarkers that predict recovery trajectories in older surgical patients, these tools may inform surgical decision-making, guide pre-habilitation efforts, and elucidate mechanisms underlying resilience. This study design could motivate future geriatric research on resilience.
具有相似健康状况的老年人在经历健康压力源后往往会出现广泛的不同结果。健康压力源后恢复情况的差异可能部分归因于分子、细胞或系统水平的生物学机制不同,这些机制是对压力源的反应而产生的。我们以正在进行的 PRIME-KNEE 研究为例,来说明验证有预测价值的临床测试和生物标志物的研究,这些测试和生物标志物可预测对特定健康压力源的适应能力。
PRIME-KNEE 是一项正在进行的前瞻性队列研究,将纳入 250 名年龄≥60 岁、接受全膝关节置换术的成年人。数据在基线(术前)、手术期间、术后 7 天每天以及术后 1、2、4 和 6 个月收集。有预测价值的测试包括认知-运动双重任务行走测试、功能近红外光谱评估的脑血管反应性、外周血单个核细胞体外对脂多糖毒素和流感疫苗的反应性以及手术期间的心率变异性。在基线时收集认知、心理和身体表现测试来估计术前储备。从电子病历和通过参与者访谈中提取人口统计学、药物、合并症和压力源特征。在基线和术后第 1 天收集基于血液的生物标志物。术后重复测量包括通过电话每天评估的谵妄评估工具和疼痛量表的项目,以及术后 7 天和认知变化指数(参与者和知情人)、下肢日常生活活动、疼痛量表和术后 1、2、4 和 6 个月使用 Garmin 活动记录仪评估的步数。统计模型使用这些指标来描述适应能力表型,并评估与压力后适应能力相关的术前临床指标。
如果 PRIME-KNEE 验证了可行的预测老年手术患者恢复轨迹的临床测试和生物标志物,这些工具可能为手术决策提供信息,指导术前康复努力,并阐明适应能力的机制。这种研究设计可能会激发未来关于适应能力的老年研究。