Frailty as a mediator of postoperative delirium in older adults undergoing orthopedic surgery: A causal mediation analysis

Inthira Roopsawang , Suparb Aree-Ue , Hilaire Thompson , Pawin Numthavaj
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Abstract

Background

Postoperative delirium has a high prevalence in hospitalized older adults. Frail older adults have an increased risk for developing it. Preoperative pain—a common symptom in older adults with orthopedic conditions—shows a connection with frailty through an inflammatory process. However, an association among preoperative pain, frailty, and postoperative delirium remains unexplored among older adults undergoing orthopedic surgery.

Objectives

To examine the magnitude, direction, and mediation effect of frailty on the association between preoperative pain and postoperative delirium among older adults undergoing orthopedic surgery.

Design

A secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study.

Setting and participants

A cohort of 200 older adults (60 years and older) who underwent major orthopedic surgery at a university hospital in Thailand was recruited for the study.

Methods

Participants responded to the Demographic and Health Information Form, the Reported Edmonton Frailty Scale-Thai version, and the Thai version of the 4 A's test. Analyses were conducted using a causal mediation analysis with 95 % confidence intervals.

Results

We found that 12.5 % of participants developed postoperative delirium. For the direct paths associated with postoperative delirium, statistically significant effects were observed for frailty, preoperative pain, and comorbidity. Considering frailty as a mediator of postoperative delirium, a significant positive indirect effect was identified from preoperative pain. Controlling for age and comorbidities, frailty mediated the association between preoperative pain and postoperative delirium in a statistically significant manner; the average direct effect was 0.014 (95 % confidence interval: 0.008–0.020), the average causal mediating effect was 0.002 (95 % confidence interval: 0.000–0.010), the total effects was 0.017 (95 % confidence interval: 0.010–0.020), and the probability mediation accounted for 14 % (95 % confidence interval: 0.031–0.300).

Conclusion

Integrating the concept of age-related decline and frailty assessment may offer opportunities to provide disease-specific care and strengthen precision perioperative care, which ultimately enhance quality of life in older adults undergoing orthopedic surgery.
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虚弱是骨科手术老年人术后谵妄的中介因素:因果中介分析
背景术后谵妄在住院老年人中发病率很高。年老体弱的老年人发生谵妄的风险更高。术前疼痛是患有骨科疾病的老年人的常见症状,通过炎症过程显示出与虚弱之间的联系。然而,在接受骨科手术的老年人中,术前疼痛、虚弱和术后谵妄之间的关联仍未得到研究。目的 研究虚弱对接受骨科手术的老年人术前疼痛和术后谵妄之间关联的影响程度、方向和中介效应。设计对一项前瞻性队列研究进行二次分析。研究地点和参与者在泰国一所大学医院招募了 200 名接受骨科大手术的老年人(60 岁及以上)进行研究。结果我们发现,12.5%的参与者出现了术后谵妄。在与术后谵妄相关的直接路径中,我们观察到虚弱、术前疼痛和合并症在统计学上有显著影响。考虑到虚弱是术后谵妄的中介因素,术前疼痛对术后谵妄有明显的正向间接影响。在控制年龄和合并症的情况下,虚弱对术前疼痛和术后谵妄之间的关联具有显著的统计学中介作用;平均直接效应为 0.014(95 % 置信区间:0.008-0.020),平均因果中介效应为 0.002(95 % 置信区间:0.000-0.010),总效应为 0.017(95 % 置信区间:0.结论将年龄相关性衰退的概念与虚弱评估相结合,可为提供特定疾病护理和加强精准围手术期护理提供机会,最终提高接受骨科手术的老年人的生活质量。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
45
审稿时长
81 days
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