Published December 13, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Prevalence and feasibility of assessing the frailty phenotype among hemodialysis patients in a dialysis unit

  • 1. Edward Hines Jr. Veterans Administration Hospital
  • 2. Northwestern University
  • 3. University of Chicago

Description

Background: Frailty increases risk of morbidity and mortality in hemodialysis patients. Frailty assessments could trigger risk reduction interventions if broadly adopted in clinical practice. We aimed to assess the clinical feasibility of frailty assessment among Veteran hemodialysis patients.

Methods: Hemodialysis patients' ≥50 years were recruited from a single dialysis unit between 9/1/2021 and 3/31/2022.Patients who consented underwent a frailty phenotype assessment by clinical staff. Five criteria were assessed: unintentional weight loss, low grip strength, self-reported exhaustion, slow gait speed, and low physical activity. Participants were classified as frail (3-5 points), pre-frail (1-2 points) or non-frail (0 points). Feasibility was determined by the number of eligible participants completing the assessment.

Results: Among 82 unique dialysis patients, 45 (52%) completed the assessment, 13 (16%) refused, 18 (23%) were not offered the assessment due to death, transfers, or switch to transplant or peritoneal dialysis, and 6 patients were excluded because they did not meet mobility criteria. Among assessed patients, 40(88%) patients were identified as pre-frail (46.6%) or frail (42.2%). Low grip strength was most common (90%). Those who refused were more likely to have peripheral vascular disease (p = 0.001), low albumin (p = 0.0187), low sodium (p = 0.0422), and ineligible for kidney transplant (p = 0.005).

Conclusions: Just over half of eligible hemodialysis patients completed the frailty assessment suggesting difficulty with broad clinical adoption expectations. Among those assessed, frailty and pre-frailty prevalence was high. Given patients who were not tested were clinically high risk, our reported prevalence likely underestimates true frailty prevalence. Providing frailty reduction interventions to all hemodialysis patients could have high impact for this group.

Data availability

All data generated or analyzed during this study are included in this article. Further enquiries can be directed to the corresponding author.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1186/s12882-023-03413-w
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10167

Funding

Edward Hines Jr Veterans Administration Hospital
Serwa Geriatric Grant administered through Chicago Association for Research and Education in Science (CARES)

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Medicine