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SPECIAL SECTION |
1 Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Section of Internal Medicine, Gerontology, and Geriatrics, University of Ferrara, Italy.
2 Laboratory of Epidemiology, Demography, and Biometry, National Institute on Aging, Bethesda, Maryland.
Address correspondence to Stefano Volpato, MD, MPH, Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Ferrara, Via Savonarola, 9, I-44100 Ferrara, Italy. E-mail vlt{at}unife.it
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Methods. We enrolled 92 women and men 65 years old or older who were able to walk, who had a Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score
18, and who were admitted to the hospital with a clinical diagnosis of congestive heart failure, pneumonia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), or minor stroke. The SPPB was assessed at hospital admission and discharge. Self-report functional assessment included basic activities of daily living (ADL) and instrumental activities of daily living (IADL). Spearman's rank correlation coefficients and multivariable linear regression analyses were used to study the association of SPPB score and functional and clinical characteristics, including length of hospital stay.
Results. The mean age was 77.7 years (range 65–94 years), 49% were female, 64.1% had congestive heart failure, 16% COPD, 13.1% pneumonia, and 6.5% minor stroke. At hospital admission the mean SPPB score was 6.0 ± 2.7. SPPB scores were inversely correlated with age, the severity of the index disease, and IADL and ADL difficulty 2 weeks before hospital admission (p <.01), and were directly correlated with MMSE score (p =.002). On average, SPPB score increased 1 point (+0.97, standard error of the mean = 0.2; p for paired t test <.001) from baseline to hospital discharge assessment. After adjustment for potential confounders, baseline SPPB score was significantly associated with the length of hospital stay (p <.007).
Conclusion. In older acute care inpatients, SPPB is a valid indicator of functional and clinical status. SPPB score at hospital admission is an independent predictor of the length of hospital stay.
Key Words: Short Physical Performance Battery Functional assessment Hospital Feasibility Prognosis Aging
Identification of patients at high risk of functional decline is of paramount importance for the prevention of this common negative outcome. However, medical diagnoses and traditional clinical assessment have limited capacity to discriminate high- and low-risk groups (3). Objective measures of physical performance may prove to be an additional and useful clinical tool for risk stratification.
In the Established Populations for the Epidemiologic Study of the Elderly it was demonstrated that the Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB), a set of objective measures of lower extremity physical performance, was highly predictive of subsequent disability, institutionalization, and mortality (4). The risk gradient for these outcomes was seen across the full spectrum of baseline functional performance, indicating that increased risk can be documented even for persons in the mid-range of performance. An important extension to the research use of these measures is their application in the clinical setting. Studenski and colleagues (5) demonstrated that the SPPB could be performed safely and in a short time in outpatient clinics, and that it predicted adverse outcomes similarly to what were found in epidemiological research cohorts. The authors proposed the physical performance measures as "simple and accessible vital signs" for the screening of older adults in the clinical setting. This finding supports the premise that standardized performance measures of physical functioning may be valuable when used in routine clinical practice as early warning signs of impending problems. Functional evaluation is a cornerstone of multidimensional geriatric assessment. Nevertheless, performance-based measures have not been incorporated in routine evaluation of older inpatients so far (6).
To investigate the feasibility and clinical utility of physical performance assessment in the geriatric acute setting, we conducted a 1-year observational study of acutely ill older inpatients. The primary objective of this data analysis was to describe the clinical correlates and short-term predictive value of SPPB assessed in a sample of older patients admitted to the hospital for an acute medical event.
| METHODS |
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The performance-based measures of physical function were assessed at hospital admission (within 56 hours after actual hospital admission), within 24 hours before hospital discharge, and during the home visits 1 week and 1 month after hospital discharge. By daily meetings with the department referent-physicians (the physician in charge of patient's care), the second performance-based assessment was performed for all patients the day of hospital discharge. The local Institutional Review Board reviewed and approved the study protocol.
Measures
Demographics.--
Sociodemographic information, including gender, marital status, living arrangement, educational level, and smoking habits were collected at baseline by standardized interview.
Performance-based measures of physical function.-- Performance-based measures of physical function included the SPPB and handgrip strength. The trained research physicians tested all performance-based measures. The SPPB includes usual walking speed over 4 meters; five chair stands test, and balance test. A score (scale, 0–4) was assigned to performance on time to rise five times from a seated position, standing balance, and 4-meter walking velocity. Individuals received a score of 0 for each task they were unable to complete. Participants were coded as "unable to perform" when (a) they tried but were unable; or (b) the interviewer or subject felt it was unsafe. Scores of 1–4 for each task were assigned based on quartiles of performance for more than 6000 participants in the Established Populations for the Epidemiologic Study of the Elderly (4,7). Summing the three individual categorical scores, a summary performance score was created for each participant (range 0–12), with higher scores indicating better lower body function. The SPPB score is a global measure of lower extremity functioning that predicts mobility loss, nursing home placement, and mortality among community-dwelling elderly individuals. The SPPB has been shown to be reliable, valid, and sensitive to change. Intraclass correlation coefficients ranged from 0.88 to 0.92 for measures made 1-week apart, with a 6-month average correlation coefficient of 0.78 (8). Handgrip strength was measured using a standardized protocol (9). The assessment of grip strength using a handheld dynamometer has been previously shown to be reliable and valid among hospitalized older patients (10).
Self-report measure of physical function.-- Information on six instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) was obtained using a modified version of the Lawton and Brody scale (11). The six activities included were as follows: using the telephone, traveling via car or public transportation, shopping, housecleaning, handling money, and taking medications. Participants were asked if they had any difficulty performing each task without help from another person or special equipment. If they said they did have difficulty, they were then asked how much difficulty, with response options of "some difficulty, a lot of difficulty, or unable to do without help." At hospital admission the patients were asked if they had any difficulty performing each task during the preceding 2 weeks. The same information was collected at home visits and during the four telephone interviews.
Walking performance was assessed inquiring the patient about level of difficulty walking 400 meters (a quarter of a mile) and walking up 10 steps without resting. Disability in basic ADL (ADL) was measured according to the participants' self-reported difficulty in performing each of six activities: getting in and out of a bed, bathing, dressing, eating, personal hygiene, and using the toilet (12). For mobility and basic ADL the format was the same used for IADLs. Based on the results of previous works (1,3) showing a high rate of decline in ADL function in the weeks preceding hospital admission, information on basic ADL was queried for both hospital admission and during the preceding 2 weeks.
Cognitive and affective function.-- Cognitive functioning was assessed using the MMSE (13). Patients with scores <24 were considered to have mild cognitive impairment. Depressive symptoms were measured using the Center for Epidemiological Studies–Depression (CES-D) Scale (14) (range from 0 to 60, with higher scores indicating more depressive symptomatology). Patients with scores >16 were considered to have depressive symptomatology (15).
Comorbidity and indicators of disease severity.-- Comorbidity was assessed by using the Cumulative Illness Rating Scale (CIRS; 16) a validated (17) physician-rated index derived by means of patient history as well as physical examination and laboratory findings. The CIRS is divided into 14 categories or disorders. This index measures the chronic medical illness burden while taking into consideration the severity of chronic diseases. The final score of the CIRS is the sum of each of the 14 individual system scores, with higher values indicating greater disease burden severity. In addition, congestive heart failure, COPD, pneumonia, and stroke severity were assessed by the New York Heart Association cardiac function classification, the GOLD classification (18), the Fine prognostic score (19), and the Canadian Neurological scale (20), respectively.
Analysis
Data for this article are from the in-hospital evaluation, including admission and discharge assessments. Variables are reported as mean values ± standard deviation, median and interquartile range (Q1–Q3), or percentages. The associations of SPPB score with clinical and self-reported functional characteristics were evaluated by using Spearman's rank correlation tests. Difference between the SPPB score at admission and discharge was analyzed using the t test for paired data. To explore the short-term predictive value of SPPB, we estimated hospital length of stay, a proxy measure of health status and length of recovery (21), as a function of SPPB score evaluated at hospital admission. This analysis was performed using multivariable linear regression models adjusting for age, gender, comorbidity, and basic ADL disability. SBBP was analyzed both as three-group categorical variable and as continuous variable. All analyses were performed using STATA statistical software (release 9; College Station, TX).
| RESULTS |
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| DISCUSSION |
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Despite a large body of epidemiological evidence demonstrating the predictive value of different mobility performance tests in terms of various adverse outcomes in community-dwelling elders (7,22–25), the use of physical performance measures in the acute-care clinical setting has received little attention so far. Our results confirm and extend, at a clinical level, the findings of previous epidemiological studies. In particular, our findings are in good agreement with the study of Purser and colleagues (6) who demonstrated, in a sample of frail male veterans, that walking speed assessed during hospitalization provides useful information for the functional and prognostic assessment of acutely ill older adults. Our study demonstrated that SPPB score has good concurrent validity with baseline clinical indicators and self-report measures of disability; nevertheless, the values of the correlation coefficients for the association between SPPB and ADL disability (0.45–0.53) suggested that, although statistically correlated, these two tools explore different and only partially overlapping domains of physical function. Furthermore, SPPB score evaluated at hospital admission was linearly and directly associated with length of hospital stay, with the relationship remaining significant after adjustment for comorbidity and level of self-reported disability, whereas the association between ADL disability and length of hospital stay was statistically significant in the univariate analysis but was attenuated and no longer statistically significant in the multivariate analysis. From this point of view, our findings reinforce the concept that self-reported and performance-based measurements provide complementary information and that performance-based assessment might add prognostic information in patients with or with no or moderate ADL disability (26). Indeed, we excluded patients who were unable to walk, and only five patients reported being unable to perform one or more basic ADLs before hospital admission.
In older inpatients, change in functional status during hospitalization has been related to important short- and long-term outcomes, including nursing home admission, disability, and mortality (27). Previous studies in which functional status was assessed by means of self-report measures reported a 37% rate of change in ADL status between hospital admission and hospital discharge. In our study, 83.7% of the patients experienced a clinically relevant change in lower extremity function (±1 point in SPPB score) over hospitalization (28), suggesting that also in this care setting SPPB might be a more sensitive tool for functional status monitoring than self-report.
Objective measures of physical performance are likely to capture the integrated and multisystemic effect of aging, comorbidity, disease severity, malnutrition, motivation, and cognition (29–32) on the health status of older persons. Like other biomarkers, including cholesterol and albumin levels (33), SPPB might be considered to be a nonspecific but highly sensitive indicator of global health status reflecting several underlying physiological impairments (34). This hypothesis would explain why SPPB had better prognostic value compared to other individual indicators.
Our data might have important implications for the safety and feasibility with which the SPPB can be assessed in hospitalized patients. Trained research physicians conducted all the 4-meter gait speed, balance, and chair rise tests for this study of acutely ill older patients within 48 hours after hospital admission, and there was no report of any major adverse event. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time in which three different and complementary time-based tests of lower extremity function were administered to older patients admitted to the hospital. This research also demonstrated that assessing gait speed alone is as good as performing the full battery of performance tests in the prediction of length of hospital stay. If confirmed with the longitudinal data and with more specific functional outcomes, this result might have important practical applications in facilitating the widespread use of objective performance assessment in the acute care setting.
The limitations of the study include the small sample size that reduced the statistical power of our analysis and the enrolment of patients admitted to the hospital with selected medical conditions (i.e., congestive heart failure, COPD, pneumonia, and minor stroke). Although these medical conditions are among the most common reasons for hospital admission in older persons (1,3), these restricted inclusion criteria might have reduced the external validity of our findings.
Summary
This study presented the first evidence of the feasibility, validity, and preliminary prognostic utility of objective lower extremity performance assessment in the acute geriatric setting. Although our findings need to be replicated and extended in long-term longitudinal analysis, taken together these results support the hypothesis that, if incorporated into the routine in-hospital geriatric assessment, SPPB score could lead to better functional and prognostic evaluation of older acutely ill patients.
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Received December 27, 2007
Accepted March 8, 2008
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