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Frailty state utility and minimally important difference: findings from the North West Adelaide Health Study
Author(s) -
Mark Q Thompson,
Olga Theou,
Julie Ratcliffe,
Graeme Tucker,
Robert Adams,
Stephen J. Walters,
Renuka Visvanathan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
age and ageing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.014
H-Index - 143
eISSN - 1468-2834
pISSN - 0002-0729
DOI - 10.1093/ageing/afaa166
Subject(s) - medicine , frailty index , gerontology , preference , psychological intervention , weighting , cohort , demography , cohort study , population , statistics , environmental health , mathematics , pathology , psychiatry , sociology , radiology
Background frailty is a dynamic condition for which a range of interventions are available. Health state utilities are values that represent the strength of an individual’s preference for specific health states, and are used in economic evaluation. This is a topic yet to be examined in detail for frailty. Likewise, little has been reported on minimally important difference (MID), the extent of change in frailty status that individuals consider to be important. Objectives to examine the relationship between frailty status, for both the frailty phenotype (FP) and frailty index (FI), and utility (preference-based health state), and to determine a MID for both frailty measures. Design and setting population-based cohort of community-dwelling Australians. Participant in total, 874 adults aged ≥65 years (54% female), mean age 74.4 (6.2) years. Measurements frailty was measured using the FP and FI. Utilities were calculated using the short-form 6D health survey, with Australian and UK weighting applied. MID was calculated cross-sectionally. Results for both the FP and FI, frailty was significantly statistically associated (P < 0.001) with lower utility in an adjusted analysis using both Australian and UK weighting. Between-person MID for the FP was identified as 0.59 [standard deviation (SD) 0.31] (anchor-based) and 0.59 (distribution-based), whereas for the FI, MID was 0.11 (SD 0.05) (anchor-based) and 0.07 (distribution-based). Conclusions frailty is significantly associated with lower preference-based health state utility. Frailty MID can be used to inform design of clinical trials and economic evaluations, as well as providing useful clinical information on frailty differences that patients consider important.

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