Association between frailty and pain in older people at high risk of future hospitalization.

IF 2.5 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Frontiers in pain research (Lausanne, Switzerland) Pub Date : 2025-04-28 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fpain.2025.1576691
Huan-Ji Dong, Joakim Yang, Maria M Johansson, Anneli Peolsson, Marco Barbero, Magnus Nord
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Abstract

Background: Previous studies have demonstrated an independent association between pain and frailty, but knowledge about this association with different pain characteristics is limited.

Objective: This study was embedded in a prospective, pragmatic, matched-control multicenter trial at 19 primary care practices in south-eastern Sweden (ClinicalTrials.gov 170608, ID: NCT03180606), aiming to investigate the association between frailty and pain characteristics among older people (75+) at high risk of hospitalization.

Methods: High risk of hospitalization was identified using case-finding algorithm including 32 diagnostic codes of morbidities and healthcare use. Frailty was assessed by a nurse-physician team using Clinical Frailty Scale (N = 389). Data on pain aspects, physical and ADL functioning were collected in the self-reported questionnaires.

Results: One in three (n = 133, 34%) was classified as frail. About 36% (n = 142) reported frequent pain (from several times per week to constantly). Slightly over 40% reported pain lasting longer than 3 months (n = 163, 41.9%) and/or having regional or widespread pain (n = 165, 42.4%). In comparison to non-frail peers, frail participants reported higher pain intensity, more ADL-dependency, less physical activity, and more anxiety/depression (p < 0.01). In logistic regression analysis, pain frequency [Odds Ratio (OR) 1.8, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.2-2.8] was associated with frailty. However, the models with ADL-staircase score (OR: 1.4, 95% CI: 1.2-1.6) had a higher explanatory power (Nagelkerke R 2: 0.39) in predicting frailty than those without this aspect (R 2: 0.10 and 0.13).

Conclusion: In older people at high risk of hospitalization, pain frequency seemed to be related to frailty, whilst ADL dependency demonstrated a stronger association.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

未来住院风险高的老年人虚弱和疼痛之间的关系
背景:以前的研究已经证明了疼痛和虚弱之间的独立联系,但是关于这种与不同疼痛特征之间的联系的知识有限。目的:本研究纳入了一项前瞻性、实用性、匹配对照的多中心试验(ClinicalTrials.gov 170608, ID: NCT03180606),该试验在瑞典东南部的19个初级保健诊所进行,旨在调查老年人(75岁以上)住院风险高的虚弱和疼痛特征之间的关系。方法:采用病例查找算法,包括32种疾病和医疗保健使用诊断代码,对住院高危人群进行识别。虚弱由护理-医师团队使用临床虚弱量表(N = 389)进行评估。在自我报告的问卷中收集疼痛方面、身体和日常生活功能的数据。结果:三分之一(n = 133,34%)的患者体弱多病。约36% (n = 142)的患者报告频繁疼痛(从每周几次到持续)。略多于40%的报告疼痛持续时间超过3个月(n = 163, 41.9%)和/或有局部或广泛疼痛(n = 165, 42.4%)。与非虚弱的同龄人相比,虚弱的参与者报告了更高的疼痛强度,更多的adl依赖性,更少的身体活动,更多的焦虑/抑郁(p r2: 0.39),比没有这方面的人(p r2: 0.10和0.13)预测虚弱。结论:在住院风险较高的老年人中,疼痛频率似乎与虚弱有关,而ADL依赖表现出更强的相关性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
13 weeks
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