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The association of frailty on cardiac rehabilitation goal achievement

Frailty is common among patients entering cardiac rehabilitation (CR). Frailty is associated with poor health outcomes; however, it is unclear if frailty influences achieving goals in CR. We report a secondary analysis of participants who were referred to an exercise and education-based CR program f...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine 2024-08, Vol.11, p.1441336
Main Authors: MacEachern, Evan, Quach, Jack, Giacomantonio, Nicholas, Theou, Olga, Hillier, Troy, Firth, Wanda, Kehler, Dustin Scott
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Frailty is common among patients entering cardiac rehabilitation (CR). Frailty is associated with poor health outcomes; however, it is unclear if frailty influences achieving goals in CR. We report a secondary analysis of participants who were referred to an exercise and education-based CR program from 2005 to 2015. Frailty was measured by a 25-item accumulation of deficits frailty index (FI) ranging from 0 to 1; higher scores indicate higher frailty. Participants were categorized by admission frailty levels (FI scores:  0.40). CR goals were determined with shared decision-making between CR staff and the patients. We conducted logistic regression analyses to examine the odds of goal attainment by CR completion, adjusting for age, sex, education, marital status, and referring diagnosis. Analyses were performed using baseline frailty as a categorical and continuous outcome, and frailty change as a continuous outcome in separate models. Of 759 eligible participants (age: 59.5 ± 9.8, 24% female), 607 (80%) participants achieved a CR goal at graduation. CR goals were categorized into similar themes: control or lose weight (  = 381, 50%), improve physical activity behaviour and fitness (  = 228, 30%), and improve cardiovascular profile (  = 150, 20%). Compared to the most severe frailty group (FI >0.40), lower levels of frailty at baseline were associated with achieving a goal at CR completion [FI
ISSN:2297-055X
2297-055X
DOI:10.3389/fcvm.2024.1441336