Maltese G, Basile G, Meehan H, Fuller M, Cesari M, Fountoulakis N, Karalliedde J
Dr Giuseppe Maltese, School of Cardiovascular Medicine and Sciences, Faculty of Life Sciences, King's College London, 150 Stamford Street, London SE1 9NH, UK, Email:
J Nutr Health Aging. 2022;26(2):169-173. doi: 10.1007/s12603-022-1726-7.
Diabetic Foot Ulcers (DFUs) are a common and feared complication of type 1 and type 2 diabetes. People with DFUs often present a significant clinical complexity due to multimorbidity, frailty, polypharmacy, and disabling conditions. Frailty, defined using the accumulation of health deficits model, has shown to predict worsening health status, hospitalizations, and death in older persons. There are no clinical studies, to date, that have examined the prevalence and effect of frailty on DFUs outcomes. The aim of our study was to explore the impact of frailty on DFUs healing and re-hospitalization in a cohort of patients hospitalized with DFUs.
prospective cohort study.
The frailty status of 76 consecutive hospitalized patients with DFUs was assessed by using the Frailty Index (FI).
The primary outcome was the non-healing of the DFU. Secondary outcome was re-hospitalization events (for any cause) within 6 months from hospital discharge. Frailty was defined as FI>0.25.
Out of 76 patients (median age 65 years, range 31-84), 56 (74%) were frail. At six months, 81.5% of frail patients had non-healing of the DFU compared to 55% in non-frail patients (p=0.02). The rate of of re-hospitalization was also higher in frail compared to non-frail (90.3% vs 54%, respectively; p=0.01) patients. In multivariable analyses, frailty was significantly associated with a more than fivefold increased risk of DFU non-healing [odds ratio 5.54 (95% confidence interval 1.28-23.91), p=0.02]. Similarly, re-hospitalization was also significantly higher in frail patients compared to the non-frail ones.
In hospitalized patients with DFUs, frailty was highly prevalent. Frailty emerged as an independent risk factor for DFU non-healing and re-hospitalization events. Patients with DFUs require a comprehensive assessment of their frailty status which would enable personalization of their management and interventions.
糖尿病足溃疡(DFUs)是1型和2型糖尿病常见且令人担忧的并发症。由于多种疾病共存、身体虚弱、多种药物治疗以及致残性疾病,DFUs患者通常存在显著的临床复杂性。使用健康缺陷累积模型定义的身体虚弱已被证明可预测老年人健康状况恶化、住院和死亡情况。迄今为止,尚无临床研究探讨身体虚弱对DFUs结局的患病率及影响。我们研究的目的是探讨身体虚弱对因DFUs住院的一组患者的溃疡愈合及再次住院的影响。
前瞻性队列研究。
使用虚弱指数(FI)对76例连续住院的DFUs患者的虚弱状态进行评估。
主要结局是DFU未愈合。次要结局是出院后6个月内的再次住院事件(因任何原因)。身体虚弱定义为FI>0.25。
76例患者(中位年龄65岁,范围31 - 84岁)中,56例(74%)身体虚弱。6个月时,81.5%的虚弱患者DFU未愈合,而非虚弱患者为55%(p = 0.02)。虚弱患者的再次住院率也高于非虚弱患者(分别为90.3%和54%;p = 0.01)。在多变量分析中,身体虚弱与DFU不愈合风险增加超过五倍显著相关[比值比5.54(95%置信区间1.28 - 23.91),p = 0.02]。同样,虚弱患者的再次住院率也显著高于非虚弱患者。
在因DFUs住院的患者中,身体虚弱非常普遍。身体虚弱是DFU不愈合和再次住院事件的独立危险因素。DFUs患者需要对其虚弱状态进行全面评估,这将有助于实现其管理和干预的个性化。