Background Intrinsic capacity (IC) and frailty are complementary in advancing disability prevention through maintaining functionality. Objectives We examined the relationship between IC and frailty status at baseline and 1-year, and… Click to show full abstract
Background Intrinsic capacity (IC) and frailty are complementary in advancing disability prevention through maintaining functionality. Objectives We examined the relationship between IC and frailty status at baseline and 1-year, and evaluated if IC decline predicts frailty onset among robust older adults. The secondary objectives investigated associations between IC, physical fitness and health-related outcomes. Design Prospective cohort study. Setting Community-based assessments. Participants Older adults aged>55 years, who were independent in ambulation (walking aids permitted). Measurements 5 domains of IC were assessed at baseline: locomotion (Short Physical Performance Battery, 6-minute walk test), vitality (nutritional status, muscle mass), sensory (self-reported hearing and vision), cognition (self-reported memory, age- and education adjusted cognitive performance), psychological (Geriatric Depression Scale-15, self-reported anxiety/depression). Composite IC (0–10) was calculated, with higher scores representing greater IC. Frailty status was based on modified Fried criteria, with frailty progression defined as incremental Fried score at 1-year. Results 809 participants (67.6+6.8 years) had complete data for all 5 IC domains. 489 (60.4%) participants were robust but only 213 (26.3%) had no decline in any IC domain. Pre-frail and frail participants were more likely to exhibit decline in all 5 IC domains (p<0.05), with decremental composite IC [9 (8–9), 8 (6–9), 5.5 (4–7.5), p<0.001] across robust, prefrail and frail. IC was significantly associated with fitness performance, independent of age and gender. Higher composite IC reduced risk for frailty progression (OR=0.62, 95% CI 0.48–0.80), and reduced frailty onset among robust older adults (OR=0.53, 95% CI 0.37–0.77), independent of age, comorbidities and social vulnerability. Participants with higher IC were less likely to experience health deterioration (OR=0.70, 95% CI 0.58–0.83), falls (OR=0.76, 95% CI 0.65–0.90) and functional decline (OR=0.64, 95% CI 0.50–0.83) at 1-year. Conclusion Declining IC may present before frailty becomes clinically manifest, increasing risk for poor outcomes. Monitoring of IC domains potentially facilitates personalized interventions to avoid progressive frailty.
               
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