1. Development and validation of a trauma frailty scale in severely injured patients: the Nottingham Trauma Frailty Index.
- Author
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Alqarni AG, Nightingale J, Norrish A, Gladman JRF, and Ollivere B
- Subjects
- Humans, Aged, Hospitalization, Trauma Centers, Geriatric Assessment methods, Frail Elderly, Frailty diagnosis
- Abstract
Aims: Frailty greatly increases the risk of adverse outcome of trauma in older people. Frailty detection tools appear to be unsuitable for use in traumatically injured older patients. We therefore aimed to develop a method for detecting frailty in older people sustaining trauma using routinely collected clinical data., Methods: We analyzed prospectively collected registry data from 2,108 patients aged ≥ 65 years who were admitted to a single major trauma centre over five years (1 October 2015 to 31 July 2020). We divided the sample equally into two, creating derivation and validation samples. In the derivation sample, we performed univariate analyses followed by multivariate regression, starting with 27 clinical variables in the registry to predict Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS; range 1 to 9) scores. Bland-Altman analyses were performed in the validation cohort to evaluate any biases between the Nottingham Trauma Frailty Index (NTFI) and the CFS., Results: In the derivation cohort, five of the 27 variables were strongly predictive of the CFS (regression coefficient B = 6.383 (95% confidence interval 5.03 to 7.74), p < 0.001): age, Abbreviated Mental Test score, admission haemoglobin concentration (g/l), pre-admission mobility (needs assistance or not), and mechanism of injury (falls from standing height). In the validation cohort, there was strong agreement between the NTFI and the CFS (mean difference 0.02) with no apparent systematic bias., Conclusion: We have developed a clinically applicable tool using easily and routinely measured physiological and functional parameters, which clinicians and researchers can use to guide patient care and to stratify the analysis of quality improvement and research projects., Competing Interests: This study was conducted as part of A. G. Alqarni’s PhD programme at the University of Nottingham, under the supervision of B. Ollivere and J. R. F. Gladman, with funding from the King Saud University in Saudi Arabia., (© 2024 Alqarni et al.)
- Published
- 2024
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