Approaches to optimally target frailty screening among people with HIV in clinical care: findings from the Centers for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems (CNICS).
Heidi M Crane, Stephanie A Ruderman, Robin M Nance, Lydia N Drumright, Bridget M Whitney, L Sarah Mixson, Kenneth H Mayer, Joseph J Eron, Sonia Napravnik, Katerina Christopoulos, Edward R Cachay, Laura Bamford, Geetanjali Chander, Allison Webel, Michael S Saag, Amanda L Willig, Greer Burkholder, Chintan Pandya, Francisco Cartujano-Barrera, Charles Kamen, Andrew W Hahn, Jimmy Ma, Mari M Kitahata, William B Lober, Joseph Ac Delaney
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Frailty screening in HIV care has been recommended, however, screening adds burden to busy clinics. We compared criteria that predict concurrent frailty to identify approaches to optimally target frailty screening.
Methods: The development cohort included people with HIV (PWH) at six U.S. sites. Frailty was assessed based on four components of a modified Fried phenotype: fatigue, unintentional weight loss, low mobility, and poor physical activity. We evaluated demographic and clinical characteristics, comorbidities, and substance use as predictors of who should be screened using selection approaches for simple and complex frailty screening tools, including machine learning approaches. We compared discrimination and calibration including area under the receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve (AUC), sensitivity, and specificity in a validation cohort (7th site).
Results: Among the 9,592 PWH in the development cohort, 11% were frail. AUC ranged from 0.52 for simple screening approaches such as age-based to 0.84 for complex approaches in the development and validation cohorts. Using an age cutoff >50 years reduced the percentage of PWH needing screening by over half but also reduced the sensitivity to 58% in the validation cohort. Complex approaches required 47% to be screened and had a sensitivity of 89%.
Conclusions: Age-based frailty screening approaches (e.g., >50 years) miss many frail PWH. Complex tools had marginally better testing characteristics but would be more difficult to implement in clinical care. Simple targeted screening based on three characteristics (age, gender, and depressive symptoms) identified 89% of frail PWH and reduced the number who needed screened by 52%.
期刊介绍:
JAIDS: Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes seeks to end the HIV epidemic by presenting important new science across all disciplines that advance our understanding of the biology, treatment and prevention of HIV infection worldwide.
JAIDS: Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes is the trusted, interdisciplinary resource for HIV- and AIDS-related information with a strong focus on basic and translational science, clinical science, and epidemiology and prevention. Co-edited by the foremost leaders in clinical virology, molecular biology, and epidemiology, JAIDS publishes vital information on the advances in diagnosis and treatment of HIV infections, as well as the latest research in the development of therapeutics and vaccine approaches. This ground-breaking journal brings together rigorously peer-reviewed articles, reviews of current research, results of clinical trials, and epidemiologic reports from around the world.