Katayose Ryo, Tanaka Saki, Okura Mika, Arai Hidenori, Ogita Mihoko
Department of Clinical Nursing, Shiga University of Medical Science, Otsu, Japan.
Department of Clinical Nursing, Shiga University of Medical Science, Otsu, Japan.
J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2025 Jul;26(7):105609. doi: 10.1016/j.jamda.2025.105609. Epub 2025 May 10.
We investigated the association of severe dyspnea and frailty with all-cause mortality and disability in Japanese community-dwelling older adults.
A 9-year follow-up cohort study.
We enrolled 3499 community-dwelling adults aged ≥65 years without disabilities or residence in care facilities who completed a baseline survey in 2013.
Dyspnea was assessed via a questionnaire on severe dyspnea during daily activities, and frailty status was determined using the Kihon Checklist. Disability was defined as new long-term care insurance certification. Cox proportional hazard models were used to calculate hazard ratios for mortality and disability. Fine-Gray regression models were used to calculate subdistribution hazard ratios for disability while accounting for mortality as a competing risk and adjusting for confounders. Both analyses were stratified by frailty status.
Severe dyspnea was present in 240 participants (6.9%). Overall, the incidence rate of mortality was 6.37 and 2.55 per 100 person-years, and that of disability was 9.96 and 5.06 in the dyspnea and no-dyspnea groups, respectively. Severe dyspnea was associated with a hazard ratio of 1.67 (95% CI, 1.35-2.07) for mortality and 1.38 (95% CI, 1.14-1.67) for incident disability in the frailty group. After accounting for death as a competing risk using the Fine-Gray regression model, the subdistribution hazard ratio for new disability associated with severe dyspnea was 1.38 (95% CI, 1.12-1.70) in the frailty group.
Severe dyspnea was associated with an increased risk of both mortality and incident disability, particularly among participants in the frailty group. These findings highlight the heightened vulnerability of frail older adults to dyspnea-associated adverse outcomes.
我们调查了日本社区居住的老年人中严重呼吸困难和衰弱与全因死亡率及残疾之间的关联。
一项为期9年的随访队列研究。
我们纳入了3499名年龄≥65岁、无残疾且不住在护理机构的社区居住成年人,他们于2013年完成了基线调查。
通过一份关于日常活动中严重呼吸困难的问卷评估呼吸困难情况,并使用基準检查表确定衰弱状态。残疾定义为新的长期护理保险认证。采用Cox比例风险模型计算死亡率和残疾的风险比。使用Fine-Gray回归模型计算残疾的亚分布风险比,同时将死亡作为竞争风险进行考量,并对混杂因素进行调整。两项分析均按衰弱状态分层。
240名参与者(6.9%)存在严重呼吸困难。总体而言,呼吸困难组和无呼吸困难组的死亡率分别为每100人年6.37和2.55,残疾发生率分别为9.96和5.06。在衰弱组中,严重呼吸困难与死亡率的风险比为1.67(95%CI,1.35 - 2.07),与新发残疾的风险比为1.38(95%CI,1.14 - 1.67)。在使用Fine-Gray回归模型将死亡作为竞争风险进行考量后,衰弱组中与严重呼吸困难相关的新发残疾的亚分布风险比为1.38(95%CI,1.12 - 1.70)。
严重呼吸困难与死亡率和新发残疾风险增加相关,尤其是在衰弱组参与者中。这些发现凸显了衰弱老年人对与呼吸困难相关不良后果的更高易感性。