Timmons Suzanne, Faherty Mary, Curtin Catriona, Ferrara Maria Cristina, Bellelli Giuseppe, Brunetti Enrico, Bo Mario, Morandi Alessandro, Cherubini Antonio, Fedecostante Massimiliano, Coin Alessandra, Shenkin Susan D, Soysal Pinar
Centre for Gerontology and Rehabilitation, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland.
School of Medicina and Surgery, University of Milano-Bicocca, Milan, Italy.
BMC Geriatr. 2025 Apr 25;25(1):280. doi: 10.1186/s12877-025-05930-9.
This report examines how European geriatricians understand the concept of 'cognitive frailty', which was first formally defined by the International Academy on Nutrition and Aging (IANA) and the International Association of Gerontology and Geriatrics (IAGG) in 2013.
An online survey about delirium, dementia and frailty relationships and pathways was distributed across Europe through appropriate professional groups. Eligible participants were geriatricians or trainees in their final two years of specialist geriatric training, in a European country. Snowball sampling was used. In total, 440 people replied to the survey, of which 324 responded to the section on cognitive frailty. Respondents were predominantly female and there was a marked under-representation of Eastern European participants.
From a list of possible definitions, only one in four of the 324 respondents identified cognitive frailty as defined by the IANA and the IAGG, i.e., a combination of physical frailty and mild cognitive impairment. Almost two thirds of those who stated that they currently use the term in their work did not choose the IANA-IAGG definition. After the definition was shared with respondents, only 44% strongly agreed with it as an apt description of cognitive frailty, with some considering it too narrow (by omitting delirium and dementia) while others considered it too broad (by including physical frailty).
There is no clear consensus opinion among geriatricians in Europe on the definition of 'cognitive frailty'. While there is some core support for the IANA-IAGG definition, it is not intuitive to those not already familiar with the term. The variance in the current understanding of cognitive frailty among geriatricians suggests the time is right for a meaningful debate on this issue. While there is ongoing, growing research on a shared pathophysiology between physical frailty and cognitive impairment, further studies are required to evaluate the added benefit of this particular conceptual theorization in older persons care rather than its single components, and if beneficial, how awareness, understanding and correct usage of the concept can be improved.
本报告探讨了欧洲老年医学专家如何理解“认知衰弱”这一概念,该概念于2013年由国际营养与衰老学会(IANA)和国际老年学与老年医学协会(IAGG)首次正式定义。
通过适当的专业团体在欧洲范围内开展了一项关于谵妄、痴呆与衰弱关系及途径的在线调查。符合条件的参与者为欧洲国家的老年医学专家或处于专科老年医学培训最后两年的学员。采用了滚雪球抽样法。共有440人回复了该调查,其中324人回答了关于认知衰弱的部分。受访者以女性为主,东欧参与者的代表性明显不足。
在一系列可能的定义中,324名受访者中只有四分之一将认知衰弱定义为IANA和IAGG所定义的,即身体衰弱与轻度认知障碍的结合。几乎三分之二表示目前在工作中使用该术语的人没有选择IANA - IAGG的定义。在向受访者分享该定义后,只有44%的人强烈同意它是对认知衰弱的恰当描述,一些人认为它过于狭窄(遗漏了谵妄和痴呆),而另一些人则认为它过于宽泛(包括了身体衰弱)。
欧洲老年医学专家对于“认知衰弱”的定义没有明确的共识。虽然对IANA - IAGG的定义有一些核心支持,但对于不熟悉该术语的人来说并不直观。老年医学专家目前对认知衰弱理解的差异表明,现在是对这个问题进行有意义辩论的时候了。虽然关于身体衰弱和认知障碍之间共同病理生理学的研究正在进行且不断增加,但需要进一步研究来评估这一特定概念理论化在老年人护理中的附加益处,而不是其单一组成部分,以及如果有益,如何提高对该概念的认识、理解和正确使用。