Association of Frailty with Risk of Osteoarthritis Development, Progression and Worse Clinical Outcomes in Older Adults.

Jocelyn Waghorn,Selena P Maxwell,Sophie E Rayner,Rebecca Moyer,Kenneth Rockwood,Olga Theou,Maroun Rizkallah,Alexandra Legge,Myles W O'Brien
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE Both frailty and osteoarthritis become common with aging. Given their shared age-related incidence, we hypothesized that greater baseline frailty, measured by frailty index, would be associated with worse osteoarthritis outcomes, including higher incidence, poorer Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) trajectories, increased fall risk, and higher rates of total or partial knee (KA) or hip (HA) arthroplasty in middle-aged and older adults. METHODS A frailty index score was calculated for 4753 participants (58.53% females; mean age 61.2, 95% CI: 60.94-61.46) from the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI) broken into control, incidence, and progression groups. Longitudinal OAI outcomes including incidence, KOOS progression, falls, and KA/HA were extracted for ~9 years from baseline. RESULTS Higher baseline frailty was associated with development of osteoarthritis by three-, five- and nine-year follow-up (all, p<0.001) with greatest impact at nine years (OR: 1.73, 95% CI: 1.52-1.97, p<0.001). Disease trajectory, as measured by KOOS subscale scores, was negatively influenced by increasing frailty (all, p<0.001), the greatest impact being on KOOS Function (Estimate: -9.52, 95% CI: -10.28 to -8.77, p<0.001). A 0.1 difference in baseline frailty index scores was associated with increase in the odds of experiencing a fall within 3-years of baseline (OR: 1.44, 95% CI: 1.32-1.58, p<0.001). Regardless of surgical site, frailty index scores did not significantly impact risk of experiencing KA/HA except in females undergoing HA (HR: 1.29, 95% CI: 1.04-1.61, p=0.02). CONCLUSION Frailty was associated with greater risk of osteoarthritis incidence and falls, as well as KOOS-measured disease progression, but not joint-replacement surgery-free time.
老年人骨关节炎发生、进展和较差临床结果与虚弱的关系
目的:随着年龄的增长,身体虚弱和骨关节炎都变得很常见。考虑到他们共同的年龄相关发病率,我们假设更大的基线虚弱,通过虚弱指数测量,将与更糟糕的骨关节炎结果相关,包括更高的发病率,更差的膝关节损伤和骨关节炎结局评分(oos)轨迹,增加跌倒风险,以及更高的全膝关节或部分膝关节(KA)或髋关节(HA)置换率。方法将来自骨关节炎倡议(OAI)的4753名参与者(58.53%为女性,平均年龄61.2岁,95% CI: 60.94-61.46)分为对照组、发病率组和进展组,计算衰弱指数评分。纵向OAI结果包括发生率、kos进展、跌倒和KA/HA,从基线开始提取约9年。结果在3年、5年和9年的随访中,基线虚弱程度较高与骨关节炎的发展相关(均p<0.001),第9年的影响最大(OR: 1.73, 95% CI: 1.52-1.97, p<0.001)。由kos亚量表评分测量的疾病轨迹受到虚弱程度增加的负面影响(均p<0.001),对kos功能的影响最大(估计:-9.52,95% CI: -10.28至-8.77,p<0.001)。基线虚弱指数评分相差0.1与基线后3年内跌倒的几率增加相关(OR: 1.44, 95% CI: 1.32-1.58, p<0.001)。无论手术部位如何,除女性HA外,虚弱指数评分对KA/HA的风险没有显著影响(HR: 1.29, 95% CI: 1.04-1.61, p=0.02)。结论:虚弱与骨关节炎发病率和跌倒风险增加以及koos测量的疾病进展相关,但与关节置换手术无时间无关。
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