Cargando…

Optimal screening for increased risk for adverse outcomes in hospitalised older adults

Background: screening for frailty might help to prevent adverse outcomes in hospitalised older adults. Objective: to identify the most predictive and efficient screening tool for frailty. Design and setting: two consecutive observational prospective cohorts in four hospitals in the Netherlands. Subj...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Heim, Noor, van Fenema, Ester M., Weverling-Rijnsburger, Annelies W. E., Tuijl, Jolien P., Jue, Peter, Oleksik, Anna M., Verschuur, Margot J., Haverkamp, Jasper S., Blauw, Gerard Jan, van der Mast, Roos C., Westendorp, Rudi G. J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4339728/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25432981
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afu187
_version_ 1782358908225978368
author Heim, Noor
van Fenema, Ester M.
Weverling-Rijnsburger, Annelies W. E.
Tuijl, Jolien P.
Jue, Peter
Oleksik, Anna M.
Verschuur, Margot J.
Haverkamp, Jasper S.
Blauw, Gerard Jan
van der Mast, Roos C.
Westendorp, Rudi G. J.
author_facet Heim, Noor
van Fenema, Ester M.
Weverling-Rijnsburger, Annelies W. E.
Tuijl, Jolien P.
Jue, Peter
Oleksik, Anna M.
Verschuur, Margot J.
Haverkamp, Jasper S.
Blauw, Gerard Jan
van der Mast, Roos C.
Westendorp, Rudi G. J.
author_sort Heim, Noor
collection PubMed
description Background: screening for frailty might help to prevent adverse outcomes in hospitalised older adults. Objective: to identify the most predictive and efficient screening tool for frailty. Design and setting: two consecutive observational prospective cohorts in four hospitals in the Netherlands. Subjects: patients aged ≥70 years, electively or acutely hospitalised for ≥2 days. Methods: screening instruments included in the Dutch Safety Management Programme [VeiligheidsManagementSysteem (VMS)] on four geriatric domains (ADL, falls, undernutrition and delirium) were used and the Identification of Seniors At Risk, the 6-item Cognitive Impairment Test and the Mini-Mental State Examination were assessed. Three months later, adverse outcomes including functional decline, high-healthcare demand or death were determined. Correlation and regression tree analyses were performed and predictive capacities were assessed. Results: follow-up data were available of 883 patients. All screening instruments were similarly predictive for adverse outcome (predictive power 0.58–0.66), but the percentage of positively screened patients (13–72%), sensitivity (24–89%) and specificity (35–91%) highly differed. The strongest predictive model for frailty was scoring positive on ≥3 VMS domains if aged 70–80 years; or being aged ≥80 years and scoring positive on ≥1 VMS domains. This tool classified 34% of the patients as frail with a sensitivity of 68% and a specificity of 74%. Comparable results were found in the validation cohort. Conclusions: the VMS-tool plus age (VMS(+)) offers an efficient instrument to identify frail hospitalised older adults at risk for adverse outcome. In clinical practice, it is important to weigh costs and benefits of screening given the rather low-predictive power of screening instruments.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4339728
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-43397282015-03-18 Optimal screening for increased risk for adverse outcomes in hospitalised older adults Heim, Noor van Fenema, Ester M. Weverling-Rijnsburger, Annelies W. E. Tuijl, Jolien P. Jue, Peter Oleksik, Anna M. Verschuur, Margot J. Haverkamp, Jasper S. Blauw, Gerard Jan van der Mast, Roos C. Westendorp, Rudi G. J. Age Ageing Research Papers Background: screening for frailty might help to prevent adverse outcomes in hospitalised older adults. Objective: to identify the most predictive and efficient screening tool for frailty. Design and setting: two consecutive observational prospective cohorts in four hospitals in the Netherlands. Subjects: patients aged ≥70 years, electively or acutely hospitalised for ≥2 days. Methods: screening instruments included in the Dutch Safety Management Programme [VeiligheidsManagementSysteem (VMS)] on four geriatric domains (ADL, falls, undernutrition and delirium) were used and the Identification of Seniors At Risk, the 6-item Cognitive Impairment Test and the Mini-Mental State Examination were assessed. Three months later, adverse outcomes including functional decline, high-healthcare demand or death were determined. Correlation and regression tree analyses were performed and predictive capacities were assessed. Results: follow-up data were available of 883 patients. All screening instruments were similarly predictive for adverse outcome (predictive power 0.58–0.66), but the percentage of positively screened patients (13–72%), sensitivity (24–89%) and specificity (35–91%) highly differed. The strongest predictive model for frailty was scoring positive on ≥3 VMS domains if aged 70–80 years; or being aged ≥80 years and scoring positive on ≥1 VMS domains. This tool classified 34% of the patients as frail with a sensitivity of 68% and a specificity of 74%. Comparable results were found in the validation cohort. Conclusions: the VMS-tool plus age (VMS(+)) offers an efficient instrument to identify frail hospitalised older adults at risk for adverse outcome. In clinical practice, it is important to weigh costs and benefits of screening given the rather low-predictive power of screening instruments. Oxford University Press 2015-03 2014-11-28 /pmc/articles/PMC4339728/ /pubmed/25432981 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afu187 Text en © The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Research Papers
Heim, Noor
van Fenema, Ester M.
Weverling-Rijnsburger, Annelies W. E.
Tuijl, Jolien P.
Jue, Peter
Oleksik, Anna M.
Verschuur, Margot J.
Haverkamp, Jasper S.
Blauw, Gerard Jan
van der Mast, Roos C.
Westendorp, Rudi G. J.
Optimal screening for increased risk for adverse outcomes in hospitalised older adults
title Optimal screening for increased risk for adverse outcomes in hospitalised older adults
title_full Optimal screening for increased risk for adverse outcomes in hospitalised older adults
title_fullStr Optimal screening for increased risk for adverse outcomes in hospitalised older adults
title_full_unstemmed Optimal screening for increased risk for adverse outcomes in hospitalised older adults
title_short Optimal screening for increased risk for adverse outcomes in hospitalised older adults
title_sort optimal screening for increased risk for adverse outcomes in hospitalised older adults
topic Research Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4339728/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25432981
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afu187
work_keys_str_mv AT heimnoor optimalscreeningforincreasedriskforadverseoutcomesinhospitalisedolderadults
AT vanfenemaesterm optimalscreeningforincreasedriskforadverseoutcomesinhospitalisedolderadults
AT weverlingrijnsburgerannelieswe optimalscreeningforincreasedriskforadverseoutcomesinhospitalisedolderadults
AT tuijljolienp optimalscreeningforincreasedriskforadverseoutcomesinhospitalisedolderadults
AT juepeter optimalscreeningforincreasedriskforadverseoutcomesinhospitalisedolderadults
AT oleksikannam optimalscreeningforincreasedriskforadverseoutcomesinhospitalisedolderadults
AT verschuurmargotj optimalscreeningforincreasedriskforadverseoutcomesinhospitalisedolderadults
AT haverkampjaspers optimalscreeningforincreasedriskforadverseoutcomesinhospitalisedolderadults
AT blauwgerardjan optimalscreeningforincreasedriskforadverseoutcomesinhospitalisedolderadults
AT vandermastroosc optimalscreeningforincreasedriskforadverseoutcomesinhospitalisedolderadults
AT westendorprudigj optimalscreeningforincreasedriskforadverseoutcomesinhospitalisedolderadults