Frailty Index as an Adjunctive Tool for Surgical Risk Assessment in Open Heart Surgery

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1The Cardiothoracic Department, Rabin Medical Center, Petach-Tikva, Israel
2The Therapy Department, Faculty of Social Welfare and Health Sciences, Haifa University, Haifa, Israel

Open heart surgical patients become older and frailer, and the validity of the available tolls to predict M&M is often in doubt. Different surgical disciplines have recently reported that adding a frailty index score may facilitate a more accurate risk scoring model in the elderly high-risk population.

Therefore, we prospectively assessed pre-operatively the EuroScore II, and the Comprehensive Assessment of Frailty scores (CAF) of 94 consecutive patients admitted to a tertiary cardiac surgery department. The frailty parameters were evaluated by fulfilling a questioner as well as requesting the patient to preform diverse tasks. The duration of hospitalization is of great economic and clinical importance; therefore, Predicting duration of stay can facilitate appropriate preparations and optimization of care.

We aimed to compare predictors of hospitalization duration for patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Patients were mostly male (89%), median age of 67 (inter quartile range [IQR] 59-74), had a median EuroScore of 1.74 (IQR 1.1-3.56) and a hospitalization duration of 10 days (IQR 7-12). Patients presented with the following comorbidities: hypertension (79%), diabetes (48%), heart failure (25%), prior myocardial infarction (12%), renal dysfunction (14%) and underwent coronary bypass (82%) or valve (34%) surgery.

Frail patients defined as CAF > 10, had similar age (66.3 vs. 65.9; p=NS) yet longer hospitalizations (12.8 vs. 7.8 days; p<0.02) and higher EuroScore (19 vs. 6; p=0.01). Regression analysis showed that both the CAF score and Euroscore II were significantly associated with the duration of hospital stay (p=0.001). However, comparison of model fit showed that the CAF score was a more powerful predictor of hospital stay than Euroscore II (adjusted R2 0.16 vs. 0.03; p<0.001).

Therefore, our findings suggest that pre-surgical CAF score is an independent predictor of hospitalization stay following cardiac surgery, and may provide incremental prognostic information to EuroScore II.









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