Litcius/Paper detail

The Impact of Preoperative Frailty on the Clinical and Cost Outcomes of Adult Cardiac Surgery in Alberta, Canada: A Cohort Study

Carmel Montgomery, Nguyễn Xuân Thành, Henry T. Stelfox, Colleen M. Norris, Darryl Rolfson, Steven Meyer, Mohamad Zibdawi, Sean M. Bagshaw

2020CJC Open21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BackgroundThere is limited information about the impact of frailty on public payer costs in cardiac surgery. This study aimed to determine quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) and costs associated with preoperative frailty in patients referred for cardiac surgery.MethodsWe retrospectively compared costs of frailty in a cohort of 529 patients aged ≥ 50 years who were referred for nonemergent cardiac surgery in Alberta. Patients were screened preoperatively for frailty, defined as a score of 5 or greater on the Clinical Frailty Scale. The primary outcome measure was public payer costs attributable to frailty, calculated in a difference-in-difference (DID) model.ResultsThe prevalence of frailty was 10% (n = 51; 95% confidence interval [CI], 7%-12%). Median (interquartile range) costs for frail patients were higher in the first year postsurgery ($200,709 [$146,177-$486,852] vs $147,730 [$100,674-$177,025]; P < 0.001) compared to nonfrail; the difference-in-difference attributable cost of frailty was $57,836 (95% CI, $–28,608-$144,280). At 1 year, frail patients had fewer QALYs realized compared to nonfrail patients (0.71 [0.57-0.77] vs 0.82 [0.75-0.86], P < 0.001), whereas QALYs gained were similar (0.02 [–0.02-0.05] vs 0.02 [0.00–0.04], P = 0.58, median difference 0.003 [95% CI, –0.01-0.02]) in frail and nonfrail patients.ConclusionsFrailty screening identified a population with greater impairment in quality-of-life and greater healthcare costs. Costs attributable to frailty represent opportunity costs that should be considered in future cardiac surgical services planning in the context of our aging population and the growing prevalence of frailty.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCohortCardiac surgeryGerontologyCohort studyGeneral surgeryIntensive care medicineEmergency medicineSurgeryInternal medicineFrailty in Older AdultsNutrition and Health in AgingHeart Failure Treatment and Management