Frailty in pulmonary hypertension: Establishing the frailty index and impact on survival.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
40930376
Description
Background
Patients with pulmonary hypertension (PH) experience reduced physical capacity, which affects daily life functionality. Frailty signifies increased vulnerability due to diminished physiological reserves and is common in the elderly and those with chronic diseases, but has not been investigated in PH. This study aimed to create a frailty index for PH, to assess the prevalence of frailty, to determine frailty severity and progression over time and to establish a potential association between frailty and mortality in patients with PH.Methods
This retrospective cohort study included patients with right heart catheter confirmed PH. Frailty was assessed using a cumulative frailty index (FI). Logistic regression, Cox proportional hazard models and causal mediation analyses were used to determine the relationship between frailty and time from FI assessment to death or censoring.Results
After dropping 22 items with item-score correlation <0.7, a 30-item-FI was developed, demonstrating high internal consistency. At baseline 117/189 (62 %) patients were frail (FI > 0.12) and this proportion increased to 71 % at follow-up. Frail patients were older, had lower 6-min walk distance (6MWD), higher NT-proBNP, and lower pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR). Risk of death was significantly higher in patients with frailty after adjustment for age, sex, PVR, and PH treatment (HR 6.4, 95 % CI 2.14-19.1, p = 0.001); only a small proportion of this effect was mediated by 6MWD.Conclusions
Frailty is common in PH and an independent risk factor for mortality beyond confounding/effect modification. Future research should explore underlying mechanisms and the utility of integrating frailty assessment in routine PH patient care.
Patients with pulmonary hypertension (PH) experience reduced physical capacity, which affects daily life functionality. Frailty signifies increased vulnerability due to diminished physiological reserves and is common in the elderly and those with chronic diseases, but has not been investigated in PH. This study aimed to create a frailty index for PH, to assess the prevalence of frailty, to determine frailty severity and progression over time and to establish a potential association between frailty and mortality in patients with PH.Methods
This retrospective cohort study included patients with right heart catheter confirmed PH. Frailty was assessed using a cumulative frailty index (FI). Logistic regression, Cox proportional hazard models and causal mediation analyses were used to determine the relationship between frailty and time from FI assessment to death or censoring.Results
After dropping 22 items with item-score correlation <0.7, a 30-item-FI was developed, demonstrating high internal consistency. At baseline 117/189 (62 %) patients were frail (FI > 0.12) and this proportion increased to 71 % at follow-up. Frail patients were older, had lower 6-min walk distance (6MWD), higher NT-proBNP, and lower pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR). Risk of death was significantly higher in patients with frailty after adjustment for age, sex, PVR, and PH treatment (HR 6.4, 95 % CI 2.14-19.1, p = 0.001); only a small proportion of this effect was mediated by 6MWD.Conclusions
Frailty is common in PH and an independent risk factor for mortality beyond confounding/effect modification. Future research should explore underlying mechanisms and the utility of integrating frailty assessment in routine PH patient care.
Date of Publication
2025-11
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Keyword(s)
Aging
•
Comorbidity
•
Dependence
•
Functional limitation
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Brand, Jan | |
de Graaf, Wout |
Additional Credits
Series
Respiratory Medicine
Publisher
Elsevier
ISSN
1532-3064
0954-6111
Access(Rights)
open.access