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PHYSICAL FRAILTY AND ITS ASSOCIATION WITH COGNITION: THE PREDICTIVE VALUE OF A SYNDROME BEYOND ITS COMPONENT PARTS

The extent to which frailty (PFP) affects cognitive performance and change beyond that expected from its component parts is uncertain. Leveraging NHATS, a nationally-representative cohort of U.S. Medicare beneficiaries, we quantified associations between each PFP criterion and global and domain-spec...

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Autores principales: Chu, Nadia M, Bandeen-Roche, Karen, Sharrett, A Richey, Carlson, Michelle C, Xue, Qianli, Gross, Alden
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6845023/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.377
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author Chu, Nadia M
Bandeen-Roche, Karen
Sharrett, A Richey
Carlson, Michelle C
Xue, Qianli
Gross, Alden
author_facet Chu, Nadia M
Bandeen-Roche, Karen
Sharrett, A Richey
Carlson, Michelle C
Xue, Qianli
Gross, Alden
author_sort Chu, Nadia M
collection PubMed
description The extent to which frailty (PFP) affects cognitive performance and change beyond that expected from its component parts is uncertain. Leveraging NHATS, a nationally-representative cohort of U.S. Medicare beneficiaries, we quantified associations between each PFP criterion and global and domain-specific cognitive level and change (memory: immediate/delayed word-list test, executive function: clock drawing test (CDT), orientation: date, time, president-vice-resident naming), using adjusted mixed effects models with random slopes (time) and intercepts (person). We tested whether presence of frailty was associated with excess cognitive vulnerability (synergistic/excess effects, Cohen’s d) above and beyond those found for its criteria by adding an interaction term between each PFP criterion and frailty. Among 7,439 community-dwelling older adults (mean age=75.2 years) followed for a weighted mean of 3.2 years (SE= 0.03), 14.1% were frail. The most prevalent PFP criteria were low activity (30.5%) and exhaustion (29.8%). Associations were strongest for executive function, where frailty added predictive value beyond its criteria (excess effects of cognitive vulnerability ranging from -0.38SD (SE-0.05) for slowness to -0.47SD (SE=0.06) for shrinking). Slowness was a strong predictor of cognitive change in both frail and non-frail participants, especially for executive function (frail: Cohen’s d per year=-0.16, SE= 0.02; non-frail: Cohen’s d per year=-0.15, SE= 0.02). PFP is an important measure of frailty that adds predictive value beyond its criteria, especially for cognitive levels. Additionally, gait speed remains an important predictor of change in executive function. These results suggest that frailty’s contribution to cognitive performance amounts to more than the sum of its component parts.
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spelling pubmed-68450232019-11-18 PHYSICAL FRAILTY AND ITS ASSOCIATION WITH COGNITION: THE PREDICTIVE VALUE OF A SYNDROME BEYOND ITS COMPONENT PARTS Chu, Nadia M Bandeen-Roche, Karen Sharrett, A Richey Carlson, Michelle C Xue, Qianli Gross, Alden Innov Aging Session 830 (Poster) The extent to which frailty (PFP) affects cognitive performance and change beyond that expected from its component parts is uncertain. Leveraging NHATS, a nationally-representative cohort of U.S. Medicare beneficiaries, we quantified associations between each PFP criterion and global and domain-specific cognitive level and change (memory: immediate/delayed word-list test, executive function: clock drawing test (CDT), orientation: date, time, president-vice-resident naming), using adjusted mixed effects models with random slopes (time) and intercepts (person). We tested whether presence of frailty was associated with excess cognitive vulnerability (synergistic/excess effects, Cohen’s d) above and beyond those found for its criteria by adding an interaction term between each PFP criterion and frailty. Among 7,439 community-dwelling older adults (mean age=75.2 years) followed for a weighted mean of 3.2 years (SE= 0.03), 14.1% were frail. The most prevalent PFP criteria were low activity (30.5%) and exhaustion (29.8%). Associations were strongest for executive function, where frailty added predictive value beyond its criteria (excess effects of cognitive vulnerability ranging from -0.38SD (SE-0.05) for slowness to -0.47SD (SE=0.06) for shrinking). Slowness was a strong predictor of cognitive change in both frail and non-frail participants, especially for executive function (frail: Cohen’s d per year=-0.16, SE= 0.02; non-frail: Cohen’s d per year=-0.15, SE= 0.02). PFP is an important measure of frailty that adds predictive value beyond its criteria, especially for cognitive levels. Additionally, gait speed remains an important predictor of change in executive function. These results suggest that frailty’s contribution to cognitive performance amounts to more than the sum of its component parts. Oxford University Press 2019-11-08 /pmc/articles/PMC6845023/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.377 Text en © The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Session 830 (Poster)
Chu, Nadia M
Bandeen-Roche, Karen
Sharrett, A Richey
Carlson, Michelle C
Xue, Qianli
Gross, Alden
PHYSICAL FRAILTY AND ITS ASSOCIATION WITH COGNITION: THE PREDICTIVE VALUE OF A SYNDROME BEYOND ITS COMPONENT PARTS
title PHYSICAL FRAILTY AND ITS ASSOCIATION WITH COGNITION: THE PREDICTIVE VALUE OF A SYNDROME BEYOND ITS COMPONENT PARTS
title_full PHYSICAL FRAILTY AND ITS ASSOCIATION WITH COGNITION: THE PREDICTIVE VALUE OF A SYNDROME BEYOND ITS COMPONENT PARTS
title_fullStr PHYSICAL FRAILTY AND ITS ASSOCIATION WITH COGNITION: THE PREDICTIVE VALUE OF A SYNDROME BEYOND ITS COMPONENT PARTS
title_full_unstemmed PHYSICAL FRAILTY AND ITS ASSOCIATION WITH COGNITION: THE PREDICTIVE VALUE OF A SYNDROME BEYOND ITS COMPONENT PARTS
title_short PHYSICAL FRAILTY AND ITS ASSOCIATION WITH COGNITION: THE PREDICTIVE VALUE OF A SYNDROME BEYOND ITS COMPONENT PARTS
title_sort physical frailty and its association with cognition: the predictive value of a syndrome beyond its component parts
topic Session 830 (Poster)
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6845023/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.377
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