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Longitudinal trajectories of a claims-based frailty measure during adjuvant chemotherapy in women with stage I-III breast cancer.

Authors :
Duchesneau ED
Reeder-Hayes K
Stürmer T
Kim DH
Edwards JK
Lund JL
Source :
The oncologist [Oncologist] 2024 Oct 03; Vol. 29 (10), pp. e1291-e1301.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: Frailty is a dynamic syndrome characterized by reduced physiological reserve to maintain homeostasis. Prospective studies have reported frailty worsening in women with breast cancer during chemotherapy, with improvements following treatment. We evaluated whether the Faurot frailty index, a validated claims-based frailty measure, could identify changes in frailty during chemotherapy treatment and identified predictors of trajectory patterns.<br />Methods: We included women (65+ years) with stage I-III breast cancer undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy in the SEER-Medicare database (2003-2019). We estimated the Faurot frailty index (range: 0-1; higher scores indicate greater frailty) at chemotherapy initiation, 4 months postinitiation, and 10 months postinitiation. Changes in frailty were compared to a matched noncancer comparator cohort. We identified patterns of frailty trajectories during the year following chemotherapy initiation using K-means clustering.<br />Results: Twenty-one thousand five hundred and ninety-nine women initiated adjuvant chemotherapy. Mean claims-based frailty increased from 0.037 at initiation to 0.055 4 months postchemotherapy initiation and fell to 0.049 10 months postinitiation. Noncancer comparators experienced a small increase in claims-based frailty over time (0.055-0.062). We identified 6 trajectory patterns: a robust group (78%), 2 resilient groups (16%), and 3 nonresilient groups (6%). Black women and women with claims for home hospital beds, wheelchairs, and Parkinson's disease were more likely to experience nonresilient trajectories.<br />Conclusions: We observed changes in a claims-based frailty index during chemotherapy that are consistent with prior studies using clinical measures of frailty and identified predictors of nonresilient frailty trajectories. Our study demonstrates the feasibility of using claims-based frailty indices to assess changes in frailty during cancer treatment.<br /> (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1549-490X
Volume :
29
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The oncologist
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38716777
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/oncolo/oyae092