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The Free Triiodothyronine/Free Thyroxine Ratio Is Associated with Frailty in Older Adults: A Longitudinal Multisetting Study

Chukwuma Okoye, Beatrice Arosio, Silvia Carino, Luana Putrino, Riccardo Franchi, Sara Rogani, Matteo Cesari, Daniela Mari, Giovanni Vitale, Alba Malara, Valeria Calsolaro, Fabio Monzani

2023Thyroid19 citationsDOI

Abstract

Background: Various models have been proposed to predict frailty, including those based on clinical criteria and phenotypes. However, a simple biomarker associated with frailty has been not yet identified. The aim of this study is to evaluate the relationship between free triiodothyronine (fT3)/free thyroxine (fT4) ratio value and the degree of frailty among three different cohorts of older individuals: (1) acutely ill hospitalized patients, (2) nursing-home (NH) residents, and (3) home-dwelling centenarians. Methods: We performed a secondary analysis of de-identified patient-level data from two prospective observational studies on acutely hospitalized older patients (Geriatric Acute Unit [GAU]), and home-dwelling centenarians (CENT), and a retrospective-prospective observational study on older NH residents. Demographic characteristics, along with a 30-items Frailty Index (FI) and serum thyrotropin, fT3 and fT4 measurements were obtained. Results: Six hundred fifteen individuals (aged 86.4 ± 8.9 years; 55.1% females) were included in the study, including 298 (48.5%) GAU, 250 (40.6%) NH, and 67 (10.9%) CENT. A significant inverse relationship between fT3/fT4 ratio and FI values was observed ( ρ s = −0.17 [confidence interval; CI: −0.092 to 0.252], p < 0.001), and this was confirmed by logistic multivariate analysis ( β = −0.44, odds ratio [OR]: 0.64 [CI: 0.47–0.87], p < 0.001) (after adjustment for age, sex, and cohorts). Moreover, a progressively decreased mortality risk was associated with rising fT3/fT4 ratio (OR 0.60 [CI: 0.44–0.80] β = −0.51, p < 0.001]. Conclusions: The fT3/fT4 ratio value was inversely correlated with frailty degree and mortality risk in a large cohort of older individuals, including centenarians, regardless of their sex and clinical condition. fT3/fT4 ratio value could represent an easily measured independent biochemical marker of frailty degree in older people.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineOdds ratioConfidence intervalInternal medicineProspective cohort studyMultivariate analysisObservational studyTriiodothyronineFree thyroxineLogistic regressionHormoneThyroid functionFrailty in Older AdultsNutrition and Health in AgingHealth, Environment, Cognitive Aging
The Free Triiodothyronine/Free Thyroxine Ratio Is Associated with Frailty in Older Adults: A Longitudinal Multisetting Study | Litcius