Jaekyung Choi, Department of Family Medicine, Research Institute of Medical Science, Konkuk University School of Medicine, Konkuk University Medical Center, 120-1, Neungdong-ro, Gwangjin-gu, Seoul, 05030, South Korea, Tel: +82-2-2030-7683; Fax: +82-2-2030-7748; E-mail:
J Nutr Health Aging. 2021;25(7):938-943. doi: 10.1007/s12603-021-1652-0.
This study aims to develop a multidimensional frailty assessment tool including physical, psychological, and social frailty and to examine its psychometric property in a clinical setting.
Through a literature review and gathered expert perspectives, the Korean Frailty Scale (KFS, 0-6 points) was developed with six questions about weight loss, self-assessment of health status, energy loss, fatigue, social network, and support. The psychometric property was then validated in community-dwelling older adults using the Korean Frailty and Aging Cohort Survey (2016-2019). Receiver operator characteristic (ROC) analyses determined optimal cutoff scores for frail, pre-frail, and robust. The predictive validity for mortality, hospitalization, fall events, and disability, such as declines in activities of daily living (ADL) and instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) was assessed after adjusting for age, sex, education level, household income, body-mass index, smoking status, alcohol consumption, physical activity, marital status, current employment, and residence.
The 2,923 participants (mean age: 76.0±3.9 years, female: 52.2%) were categorized into frail (≥3 points, 21.1%), pre-frail (1-2 points, 50.2%) and robust (0 points, 28.7%) groups. Sensitivity (88.3%), specificity (91.6%), and the area under the ROC curve (0.730) for the frail group were sufficient to be accepted as a new frailty scale. The frail group had increased risk of falling (relative risk [RR]: 1.810, 95% confidence interval: 1.354-2.420), mortality (hazard ratio, 6.596, 1.802-24.137), and IADL decline (RR, 1.638, 1.231-2.178).
The KFS is a new multidimensional frailty scale for clinical geriatric assessment that was confirmed as effective for predicting adverse health outcomes in Korean community-dwelling older adults.
本研究旨在开发一种多维虚弱评估工具,包括身体、心理和社会虚弱,并在临床环境中检验其心理测量学特性。
通过文献回顾和专家观点收集,开发了韩国虚弱量表(KFS,0-6 分),包含 6 个关于体重减轻、自我健康评估、能量损失、疲劳、社交网络和支持的问题。然后,使用 2016-2019 年韩国虚弱和老龄化队列研究对社区居住的老年人进行了心理测量学验证。接收者操作特征(ROC)分析确定了虚弱、虚弱前期和健壮的最佳截断分数。在调整年龄、性别、教育水平、家庭收入、体重指数、吸烟状况、饮酒状况、身体活动、婚姻状况、当前就业状况和居住状况后,评估了对死亡率、住院率、跌倒事件和残疾(如日常生活活动(ADL)和工具性日常生活活动(IADL)下降)的预测效度。
2923 名参与者(平均年龄:76.0±3.9 岁,女性:52.2%)分为虚弱(≥3 分,21.1%)、虚弱前期(1-2 分,50.2%)和健壮(0 分,28.7%)组。虚弱组的敏感性(88.3%)、特异性(91.6%)和 ROC 曲线下面积(0.730)足以被接受为新的虚弱量表。虚弱组跌倒风险增加(相对风险 [RR]:1.810,95%置信区间:1.354-2.420)、死亡率(危险比,6.596,1.802-24.137)和 IADL 下降(RR,1.638,1.231-2.178)。
KFS 是一种新的多维虚弱评估量表,可用于临床老年评估,已被证实可有效预测韩国社区居住的老年人不良健康结局。