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Differences in preoperative frailty assessment of surgical candidates by sex, age, and race.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Nicaise, EH; Palmateer, G; Schmeusser, BN; Futral, C; Liu, Y; Goyal, S; Nabavizadeh, R; Kooby, DA; Maithel, SK; Sweeney, JF; Sarmiento, JM ...
Published in: Surg Open Sci
June 2024

INTRODUCTION: Surgical decision-making often relies on a surgeon's subjective assessment of a patient's frailty status to undergo surgery. Certain patient demographics can influence subjective judgment when compared to validated objective assessments. In this study, we explore the relationship between subjective and objective frailty assessments according to patient age, sex, and race. METHODS: Patients were prospectively enrolled in urology, general surgery, and surgical oncology clinics. Using a visual analog scale (0-100), operating surgeons independently rated the patient's frailty status. Objective frailty was classified using the Fried Frailty Criteria ranging from 0 to 5. Multivariable proportional odds models were conducted to examine the potential association of factors with objective frailty, according to surgeon frailty rating. Subgroup analysis according to patient sex, race, and age was also performed. RESULTS: Seven male surgeons assessed 203 patients preoperatively with a median age of 65. A majority of patients were male (61 %), white (67 %), and 60 % and 40 % underwent urologic and general surgery/surgical oncology procedures respectively. Increased subjective surgeon rating (OR 1.69; p < 0.001) was significantly associated with the presence of objective frailty. On subgroup analysis, a higher magnitude of such association was observed more in females (OR 1.86; p = 0.0007), non-white (OR 1.84; p = 0.0019), and older (>60, OR 1.75; p = 0.0001) patients, compared to male (OR 1.45; p = 0.0243), non-white (OR 1.48; p = 0.0109) and patients under 60 (OR 1.47; p = 0.0823). CONCLUSION: The surgeon's subjective assessment of frailty demonstrated tendencies to rate older, female, and non-white patients as frail; however, differences in patient sex, age, and race were not statistically significant.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Surg Open Sci

DOI

EISSN

2589-8450

Publication Date

June 2024

Volume

19

Start / End Page

172 / 177

Location

United States
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Nicaise, E. H., Palmateer, G., Schmeusser, B. N., Futral, C., Liu, Y., Goyal, S., … Master, V. A. (2024). Differences in preoperative frailty assessment of surgical candidates by sex, age, and race. Surg Open Sci, 19, 172–177. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sopen.2024.05.003
Nicaise, Edouard H., Gregory Palmateer, Benjamin N. Schmeusser, Cameron Futral, Yuan Liu, Subir Goyal, Reza Nabavizadeh, et al. “Differences in preoperative frailty assessment of surgical candidates by sex, age, and race.Surg Open Sci 19 (June 2024): 172–77. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sopen.2024.05.003.
Nicaise EH, Palmateer G, Schmeusser BN, Futral C, Liu Y, Goyal S, et al. Differences in preoperative frailty assessment of surgical candidates by sex, age, and race. Surg Open Sci. 2024 Jun;19:172–7.
Nicaise, Edouard H., et al. “Differences in preoperative frailty assessment of surgical candidates by sex, age, and race.Surg Open Sci, vol. 19, June 2024, pp. 172–77. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.sopen.2024.05.003.
Nicaise EH, Palmateer G, Schmeusser BN, Futral C, Liu Y, Goyal S, Nabavizadeh R, Kooby DA, Maithel SK, Sweeney JF, Sarmiento JM, Ogan K, Master VA. Differences in preoperative frailty assessment of surgical candidates by sex, age, and race. Surg Open Sci. 2024 Jun;19:172–177.
Journal cover image

Published In

Surg Open Sci

DOI

EISSN

2589-8450

Publication Date

June 2024

Volume

19

Start / End Page

172 / 177

Location

United States