Discrepancy in Frailty Identification: Move beyond Predictive Validity. Xue, Q., Tian, J., Walston, J. D, Chaves, P. H M, Newman, A. B, & Bandeen-Roche, K. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci, February, 2019.
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\textlessp\textgreater\textbfBACKGROUND: To evaluate the discordance in frailty classification between the frailty index (FI) and the physical frailty phenotype (PFP) and identify factors discriminating those with discordant frailty classification from each other and from those for whom the assessments agree.\textless/p\textgreater\textlessp\textgreater\textbfMETHODS: A prospective observational study of older adults aged 65 and older selected from Medicare eligibility lists in four US communities (n=5,362). The PFP was measured by the Cardiovascular Health Study PFP. Subjects meeting \textgreater=3 of the 5 criteria were deemed frail. The FI was calculated as the proportion of deficits in an a priori selected set of 48 measures and subjects were classified as frail if FI\textgreater0.35.\textless/p\textgreater\textlessp\textgreater\textbfRESULTS: The prevalence of frailty was 7.0% by the PFP and 8.3% by the FI. Of the 730 deemed frail by either instrument, only 12% were in agreement; whereas 39% were classified as frail by PFP but not FI; and 48% were classified as frail by FI but not PFP. Participants aged 65-72 or greater disease burden were mostly likely to be characterized as being FI-frail but not PFP-frail. The associations of frailty with age and mortality was stronger when frailty was measured by the PFP rather than the FI.\textless/p\textgreater\textlessp\textgreater\textbfCONCLUSIONS: Despite comparable frailty prevalence between the PFP and the FI, there was substantial discordance in individual-level classification, with highest agreement existing only in the most vulnerable subset. These findings suggest that there are clinically important contexts in which PFP and FI cannot be used interchangeably.\textless/p\textgreater
@article{xue_discrepancy_2019,
	title = {Discrepancy in {Frailty} {Identification}: {Move} beyond {Predictive} {Validity}.},
	issn = {1758-535X},
	doi = {10.1093/gerona/glz052},
	abstract = {{\textless}p{\textgreater}\textbf{BACKGROUND: }To evaluate the discordance in frailty classification between the frailty index (FI) and the physical frailty phenotype (PFP) and identify factors discriminating those with discordant frailty classification from each other and from those for whom the assessments agree.{\textless}/p{\textgreater}{\textless}p{\textgreater}\textbf{METHODS: }A prospective observational study of older adults aged 65 and older selected from Medicare eligibility lists in four US communities (n=5,362). The PFP was measured by the Cardiovascular Health Study PFP. Subjects meeting {\textgreater}=3 of the 5 criteria were deemed frail. The FI was calculated as the proportion of deficits in an a priori selected set of 48 measures and subjects were classified as frail if FI{\textgreater}0.35.{\textless}/p{\textgreater}{\textless}p{\textgreater}\textbf{RESULTS: }The prevalence of frailty was 7.0\% by the PFP and 8.3\% by the FI. Of the 730 deemed frail by either instrument, only 12\% were in agreement; whereas 39\% were classified as frail by PFP but not FI; and 48\% were classified as frail by FI but not PFP. Participants aged 65-72 or greater disease burden were mostly likely to be characterized as being FI-frail but not PFP-frail. The associations of frailty with age and mortality was stronger when frailty was measured by the PFP rather than the FI.{\textless}/p{\textgreater}{\textless}p{\textgreater}\textbf{CONCLUSIONS: }Despite comparable frailty prevalence between the PFP and the FI, there was substantial discordance in individual-level classification, with highest agreement existing only in the most vulnerable subset. These findings suggest that there are clinically important contexts in which PFP and FI cannot be used interchangeably.{\textless}/p{\textgreater}},
	journal = {J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci},
	author = {Xue, Qian-Li and Tian, Jing and Walston, Jeremy D and Chaves, Paulo H M and Newman, Anne B and Bandeen-Roche, Karen},
	month = feb,
	year = {2019}
}

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