Claudia Barison, Elda Piovani, Liala Moschetti, Eleonora Pedretti, Maria Grazia Lazzaroni, Franco Franceschini, Paolo Airò
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate the prevalence of frailty, a clinical syndrome characterised by reduced physiological reserve which exposes affected individuals to the worst consequences of acute clinical episodes, in SSc patients, and to identify associated demographic and clinical factors.
Methods: Frailty, comorbidities, SSc-related-activity, -organ damage and -overall patient-reported impact were assessed in 169 consecutive outpatients with SSc aged over 60 years by Primary Care Frailty Index (PC-FI), age-adjusted Charlson Comorbidity index (CCI), revised EUSTAR activity index, Scleroderma Clinical Trials Consortium Damage Index (SCTC-DI), and Sclero-ID, respectively. Information and data on hospitalisations were recorded during follow-up visits, scheduled according to clinical necessity, in 85 patients.
Results: Frailty was observed in 51.3% of patients, with 31.9% classified as mildly frail, 10.7% as moderately frail, and 7.7% as severely frail. Frail SSc patients, as compared with non-Frail, were older, had a longer disease duration, higher CCI, SCTC-DI, Sclero-ID and exhibited more severe SSc complications. Multivariate analysis identified that disease duration and SSc-related organ damage as independent factors associated with PC-FI scores. Patients who died or required hospitalisation during follow-up were older, with higher PC-FI and CCI than the other SSc patients, though their SSc disease activity and damage did not differ significantly.
Conclusions: Over half of SSc patients exhibited frailty, which correlated with both SSc-related organ damage and comorbidities. PC-FI appears to predict death and hospitalisations in SSc patients, highlighting frailty assessment as a potential tool for health program planning.
期刊介绍:
Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology is a bi-monthly international peer-reviewed journal which has been covering all clinical, experimental and translational aspects of musculoskeletal, arthritic and connective tissue diseases since 1983.