A frailty index for predicting mortality, healthcare resources and costs of cardiac procedure patients

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Authors

Hore, Elizabeth

Date

2024-12-23

Type

thesis

Language

eng

Keyword

frailty , cardiac procedures , mortality , healthcare resource use , healthcare costs , frailty index , implementation feasibility , healthcare administrative data , key informant interviews

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Abstract

Background: Canada’s aging population is growing steadily. Older age is associated with frailty, defined as the accumulation of age and illness-related deficits, which can be measured using a frailty index. Objectives: 1) To develop a non-weighted and weighted frailty index for cardiac procedure patients and to use these to predict mortality. 2) To develop a weighted frailty index for cardiac procedures to predict healthcare utilization and costs. For objectives 1 and 2, the created frailty indices were compared with an existing frailty index. 3) To explore healthcare provider and hospital administrator perspectives on the clinical usefulness and feasibility of implementing a frailty index for cardiac procedures. Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study involving cardiac procedure patients using healthcare administrative data followed by key informant interviews with providers and hospital administrators using reflexive thematic analysis. Results: 64,822 open-heart surgery patients and 2,024 transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) patients were included in the retrospective cohort studies. For predicting mortality, the multivariable regression model containing the weighted frailty index showed a small improvement in the open-heart surgery cohort versus the non-weighted index model (concordance-statistic=0.80 [95% Confidence Interval (CI): 0.78,0.81] versus 0.79 [95% CI: 0.77,0.80] respectively). In the TAVI cohort, the pre-existing frailty index model had the greatest prediction capability. For healthcare costs, the weighted frailty index model demonstrated the highest predictive abilities in both cohorts. For length of initial hospital stay, the weighted frailty index model had the highest prediction abilities in the open-heart surgery cohort and similar capabilities to the model containing the pre-existing frailty index in the TAVI cohort. Key informant interviews revealed four themes regarding a cardiac procedure-specific frailty index: (1) potential uses; (2) feasibility for prehabilitation; (3) logistics of implementation; (4) future implementation. Subthemes included surgical candidacy and electronic incorporation of the index into health information systems. Conclusion: Researchers may choose the pre-existing frailty index for predicting TAVI mortality or the weighted frailty index when predicting healthcare costs and resources. A cardiac procedure-specific frailty index could be useful to healthcare providers when determining surgical candidacy and optimizing preoperative care, especially if electronically integrated into health information systems.

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