Review: Frailty in Older Adults
10 Nov, 2024 | 18:03h | UTCIntroduction: Frailty is a state of decreased physiological reserve and increased vulnerability to adverse health outcomes, becoming more prevalent with age. This review by Kim and Rockwood outlines definitions, biological mechanisms, measurement, and management of frailty in older adults, aiming to guide clinical practice.
Key Recommendations:
- Definitions of Frailty: Clinicians should recognize two predominant concepts: the Fried frailty phenotype, defining frailty as a clinical syndrome with features like exhaustion, weakness, slowness, inactivity, and weight loss; and the deficit-accumulation model, quantifying frailty based on accumulated health deficits.
- Biology of Frailty: Understanding biological mechanisms—such as chronic inflammation, cellular senescence, mitochondrial dysfunction, deregulated nutrient sensing, and hormonal changes—is essential for identifying modifiable risk factors and developing targeted interventions.
- Measurement of Frailty: Utilize validated assessment tools appropriate to the clinical context. The Fried frailty phenotype and the deficit-accumulation frailty index are widely used; brief screening tools and performance measures like gait speed can be practical, especially in acute care settings.
- Management and Interventions for Frailty: Management should focus on increasing physiological reserve through multicomponent interventions. Exercise (aerobic and resistance training), combined with nutritional support, comprehensive geriatric assessment, and medication optimization, has been shown to ameliorate frailty and improve mobility, strength, and daily functioning.
- Frailty Screening Before Stressful Treatments: In high-risk clinical contexts such as oncology and surgery, pre-treatment frailty assessment can guide decision-making, personalize care plans, and improve outcomes by reducing treatment-related adverse effects.
- Evidence Gaps and Future Directions: More research is needed on effective strategies for frailty identification, interventions to prevent or reverse frailty, and the cost-effectiveness of frailty-guided care models, particularly in primary care settings.
Conclusion: Incorporating frailty assessment into clinical practice enables personalized, holistic care that aligns with older patients’ health goals and needs. Interventions targeting frailty can enhance physiological reserve, reduce vulnerability to stressors, and improve clinical outcomes. Further research is essential to optimize frailty management strategies and fully realize the benefits of frailty-guided care in our aging society.