Frailty Index, Not Age, Predicts Treatment Outcomes and Adverse Events for Older Adults with Cancer

J. Fletcher, N. Reid, R. E. Hubbard, R. Berry, M. Weston,E. Walpole, R. Kimberley, D. A. Thaker,R. Ladwa

The Journal of Frailty & Aging(2024)

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Abstract
Frailty is an indicator of individual vulnerability and differentiates health status among people of the same chronological age. This study aimed to determine whether baseline frailty index (FI) was associated with systemic anticancer therapy treatment outcomes in older adults with solid cancers. Retrospective cohort study. Major metropolitan outpatient oncology service. Adults aged over 65 years with a solid malignancy who had been referred for consideration of systemic therapy, and had completed a baseline frailty assessment between January 2019 and July 2021. Frailty had been prospectively assessed with a 58-item FI derived from a geriatric oncology nurse assessment prior to initial oncologist appointments. Primary outcome was treatment completion, and secondary outcomes included incidence of high-grade treatment-related toxicity or unplanned hospital admissions, and survival outcomes. Univariate and multivariable regression analyses were conducted to test the association between treatment outcomes and baseline FI. Co-variates included age, sex, performance status, treatment intent, and stage. Kaplan-Meier and cox proportional hazard analysis were conducted for survival analysis. The median FI (IQR) was 0.24 (0.15–0.31) and 43
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Key words
Frailty,frailty index,frail elderly,geriatric oncology,geriatric assessment,cancer
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