World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborating Center for Epidemiology of Musculoskeletal Health and Ageing, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium.
Division of Public Health, Epidemiology and Health Economics, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium.
Age Ageing. 2023 Oct 28;52(Suppl 4):iv44-iv66. doi: 10.1093/ageing/afad139.
Locomotor capacity (LC) is an important domain of intrinsic capacity and key determinant of functional ability and well-being in older age. The United Nations Decade of Healthy Ageing (2021-2030) calls for strengthening data and research on healthy ageing, including the measurement of older persons' LC. To advance the measurement and monitoring of LC, there is pressing need to identify valid and reliable measures.
To identify all the available tools that were validated for measurement of LC or of its specific attributes in older people and to assess the methodological quality of the studies and measurement properties of the tools.
Systematic review.
Anywhere (Community-dwelling; long-term care facility; etc.).
Older people.
We used highly sensitive search strategies to search the following databases: Medline, Embase, Scopus, CINAHL and PsycINFO. The study was conducted following the COnsensus-based Standards for the selection of health Measurement Instruments (COSMIN) methodology for systematic review of outcome measurement instruments.
A total of 125 studies were included, which assessed tools for balance (n = 84), muscle power (n = 12), muscle strength (n = 32, including four studies about tools for balance and muscle power) and endurance (n = 1). No studies on tools for muscle function, joint function, or locomotor capacity overall, were retrieved. We identified 69 clinician-report or objective assessment tools for balance, 30 for muscle strength, 12 for muscle power and 1 endurance assessment tool. The GRADE assessment of quality of evidence showed that only a few tools have high quality evidence for both sufficient validity and reliability: The Balance Evaluation Systems Test (BESTest), the Mini-Balance Evaluation Systems Test (Mini-BESTest), the Berg Balance Scale (BBS) and the Timed Up and Go (TUG) test.
A few tools with high quality evidence for sufficient validity and reliability are currently available for balance assessment in older people that may be recommended for use in clinical and research settings. Further validation studies are required for muscle strength, muscle power and endurance assessment tools.
运动能力(LC)是内在能力的一个重要领域,也是老年人功能能力和幸福感的关键决定因素。联合国健康老龄化十年(2021-2030 年)呼吁加强健康老龄化的数据和研究,包括测量老年人的 LC。为了推进 LC 的测量和监测,迫切需要确定有效和可靠的测量工具。
确定所有已验证可用于测量老年人 LC 或其特定属性的工具,并评估研究的方法学质量和工具的测量特性。
系统评价。
任何地方(社区居住;长期护理机构;等)。
老年人。
我们使用了高度敏感的搜索策略来搜索以下数据库:Medline、Embase、Scopus、CINAHL 和 PsycINFO。该研究遵循共识基础的健康测量仪器选择标准(COSMIN)方法学进行了系统评价。
共纳入 125 项研究,评估了平衡工具(n=84)、肌肉力量(n=32,包括 4 项关于平衡和肌肉力量工具的研究)、肌肉功率(n=12)和耐力(n=1)的工具。没有检索到关于肌肉功能、关节功能或整体运动能力的工具的研究。我们确定了 69 种用于平衡的临床医生报告或客观评估工具,30 种用于肌肉力量,12 种用于肌肉功率和 1 种耐力评估工具。证据质量的 GRADE 评估表明,只有少数工具具有足够的有效性和可靠性的高质量证据:平衡评估系统测试(BESTest)、迷你平衡评估系统测试(Mini-BESTest)、伯格平衡量表(BBS)和计时起立行走测试(TUG)。
目前有一些针对老年人平衡评估的高质量证据的工具,具有足够的有效性和可靠性,可能被推荐用于临床和研究环境。需要进一步验证肌肉力量、肌肉功率和耐力评估工具。