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Development of a Claims-based Frailty Indicator Anchored to a Well-established Frailty Phenotype.

TitleDevelopment of a Claims-based Frailty Indicator Anchored to a Well-established Frailty Phenotype.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsSegal, JB, Chang, H-Y, Du, Y, Walston, JD, Carlson, MC, Varadhan, R
JournalMed Care
Date Published2017 Apr 21
ISSN1537-1948
Abstract<p><b>BACKGROUND: </b>Fried and colleagues described a frailty phenotype measured in the Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS). This phenotype is manifest when ≥3 of the following are present: low grip strength, low energy, slowed waking speed, low physical activity, or unintentional weight loss. We sought to approximate frailty phenotype using only administrative claims data to enable frailty to be assessed without physical performance measures.</p><p><b>STUDY DESIGN: </b>We used the CHS cohort data linked to participants Medicare claims. The reference standard was the frailty phenotype measured at visits 5 and 9. With penalized logistic regression, we developed a parsimonious index for predicting the frailty phenotype using a linear combination of diagnoses, operationalized with claims data. We assessed the predictive validity of frailty index by examining how well it predicted common aging-related outcomes including hospitalization, disability, and death.</p><p><b>RESULTS: </b>There were 4454 CHS participants from 4 clinical sites. In total, 84% were white, 58% were women and their mean age was 72 years at enrollment. Approximately 11% of the cohort was frail. The model had an area under the receiver operating curve of 0.75 to concurrently predict a frailty phenotype. This Claims-based Frailty Indicator significantly predicted death (odds ratio, 1.84), time to death (hazards ratio, 1.71), number of hospital admissions (incidence rate ratio, 1.74), and nursing home admission (odds ratio, 1.47) in models adjusted for age and sex.</p><p><b>CONCLUSIONS: </b>Claims data alone can be used to classify individuals as frail and nonfrail. The Claims-based Frailty Indicator might be used in research with large datasets for confounding adjustment or risk prediction. The indicator might also be used for emergency preparedness for identification of regions enriched with frail individuals.This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives License 4.0 (CCBY-NC-ND), where it is permissible to download and share the work provided it is properly cited. The work cannot be changed in any way or used commercially without permission from the journal. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.</p>
DOI10.1097/MLR.0000000000000729
Alternate JournalMed Care
PubMed ID28437320
ePub date: 
17/04