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Exploring the Relationship between Frailty, Functional Status, Polypharmacy, and Quality of Life in Elderly and Middle-Aged Patients with Cardiovascular Diseases: A One-Year Follow-Up Study

Elisabeta Ioana Hirişcău, Elena Buzdugan, Ligia-Ancuța Hui, Constantin Bodolea

2022International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The association between frailty, disability in activities of daily living (ADL), polypharmacy, and quality of life (QoL) in middle-aged patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD) is little investigated. This study sought (a) to explore this association comparatively in elderly and middle-aged hospitalized patients with CVD and (b) to determine which domains of ADL and QoL might improve the frailty prediction. A one-year follow-up study including 90 elderly (≥65 years old) and 89 middle-aged patients (40–65 years old) was conducted. At baseline, frailty assessment was performed based on the Fried criteria; Barthel Index (BI) and Duke Activity Status Index (DASI) were used for ADL, and European Quality of Life-5 dimensions (EQ-5D) for QoL. At follow-up, data were collected via telephone. At baseline, 79 patients (51 elderly and 28 middle-aged) were frail. The CVD frail patients showed functional dependency and a poor QoL compared to the non-frail (p < 0.001) and within each subgroup at follow-up. Mobility was found to predict frailty in both elderly (OR = 2.34) (C.I. (1.03–5.29)) and middle-aged patients (OR = 2.58) (C.I. (1.15–5.78)). The ADL assessment and self-reported QoL may help to identify an aggravation or an advanced frailty condition in hospitalized elderly and middle-aged CVD patients.

Topics & Concepts

PolypharmacyMedicineActivities of daily livingQuality of life (healthcare)GerontologyBarthel indexDiseasePhysical therapyInternal medicineNursingFrailty in Older AdultsHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of LifeCardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical Outcomes