Association between routine laboratory tests and long-term mortality among acutely admitted older medical patients: a cohort study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Association between routine laboratory tests and long-term mortality among acutely admitted older medical patients : a cohort study. / Klausen, Henrik Hedegaard; Petersen, Janne; Bandholm, Thomas; Juul-Larsen, Helle Gybel; Tavenier, Juliette; Eugen-Olsen, Jesper; Andersen, Ove.

In: B M C Geriatrics, Vol. 17, No. 1, 62, 01.03.2017.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Klausen, HH, Petersen, J, Bandholm, T, Juul-Larsen, HG, Tavenier, J, Eugen-Olsen, J & Andersen, O 2017, 'Association between routine laboratory tests and long-term mortality among acutely admitted older medical patients: a cohort study', B M C Geriatrics, vol. 17, no. 1, 62. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-017-0434-3

APA

Klausen, H. H., Petersen, J., Bandholm, T., Juul-Larsen, H. G., Tavenier, J., Eugen-Olsen, J., & Andersen, O. (2017). Association between routine laboratory tests and long-term mortality among acutely admitted older medical patients: a cohort study. B M C Geriatrics, 17(1), [62]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-017-0434-3

Vancouver

Klausen HH, Petersen J, Bandholm T, Juul-Larsen HG, Tavenier J, Eugen-Olsen J et al. Association between routine laboratory tests and long-term mortality among acutely admitted older medical patients: a cohort study. B M C Geriatrics. 2017 Mar 1;17(1). 62. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-017-0434-3

Author

Klausen, Henrik Hedegaard ; Petersen, Janne ; Bandholm, Thomas ; Juul-Larsen, Helle Gybel ; Tavenier, Juliette ; Eugen-Olsen, Jesper ; Andersen, Ove. / Association between routine laboratory tests and long-term mortality among acutely admitted older medical patients : a cohort study. In: B M C Geriatrics. 2017 ; Vol. 17, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{5f2473297d094e1f9e5587465bbc7609,
title = "Association between routine laboratory tests and long-term mortality among acutely admitted older medical patients: a cohort study",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Older people have the highest incidence of acute medical admissions. Old age and acute hospital admissions are associated with a high risk of adverse health outcomes after discharge, such as reduced physical performance, readmissions and mortality. Hospitalisations in this population are often by acute admission and through the emergency department. This, along with the rapidly increasing proportion of older people, warrants the need for clinically feasible tools that can systematically assess vulnerability in older medical patients upon acute hospital admission. These are essential for prioritising treatment during hospitalisation and after discharge. Here we explore whether an abbreviated form of the FI-Lab frailty index, calculated as the number of admission laboratory test results outside of the reference interval (FI-OutRef) was associated with long term mortality among acutely admitted older medical patients. Secondly, we investigate other markers of aging (age, total number of chronic diagnoses, new chronic diagnoses, and new acute admissions) and their associations with long-term mortality.METHODS: A cohort study of acutely admitted medical patients aged 65 or older. Survival time within a 3 years post-discharge follow up period was used as the outcome. The associations between the markers and survival time were investigated by Cox regression analyses. For analyses, all markers were grouped by quartiles.RESULTS: A total of 4,005 patients were included. Among the 3,172 patients without a cancer diagnosis, mortality within 3 years was 39.9%. Univariate and multiple regression analyses for each marker showed that all were significantly associated with post-discharge survival. The changes between the estimates for the FI-OutRef quartiles in the univariate- and the multiple analyses were negligible. Among all the markers investigated, FI-OutRef had the highest hazard ratio of the fourth quartile versus the first quartile: 3.45 (95% CI: 2.83-s4.22, P < 0.001).CONCLUSION: Among acutely admitted older medical patients, FI-OutRef was strongly associated with long-term mortality. This association was independent of age, sex, and number of chronic diagnoses, new chronic diagnoses, and new acute admissions. Hence FI-OutRef could be a biomarker of advancement of aging within the acute care setting.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Klausen, {Henrik Hedegaard} and Janne Petersen and Thomas Bandholm and Juul-Larsen, {Helle Gybel} and Juliette Tavenier and Jesper Eugen-Olsen and Ove Andersen",
note = "The Erratum to this article has been published in BMC Geriatrics 2017 17:67. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-017-0463-y",
year = "2017",
month = mar,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1186/s12877-017-0434-3",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
journal = "B M C Geriatrics",
issn = "1471-2318",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Association between routine laboratory tests and long-term mortality among acutely admitted older medical patients

T2 - a cohort study

AU - Klausen, Henrik Hedegaard

AU - Petersen, Janne

AU - Bandholm, Thomas

AU - Juul-Larsen, Helle Gybel

AU - Tavenier, Juliette

AU - Eugen-Olsen, Jesper

AU - Andersen, Ove

N1 - The Erratum to this article has been published in BMC Geriatrics 2017 17:67. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-017-0463-y

PY - 2017/3/1

Y1 - 2017/3/1

N2 - BACKGROUND: Older people have the highest incidence of acute medical admissions. Old age and acute hospital admissions are associated with a high risk of adverse health outcomes after discharge, such as reduced physical performance, readmissions and mortality. Hospitalisations in this population are often by acute admission and through the emergency department. This, along with the rapidly increasing proportion of older people, warrants the need for clinically feasible tools that can systematically assess vulnerability in older medical patients upon acute hospital admission. These are essential for prioritising treatment during hospitalisation and after discharge. Here we explore whether an abbreviated form of the FI-Lab frailty index, calculated as the number of admission laboratory test results outside of the reference interval (FI-OutRef) was associated with long term mortality among acutely admitted older medical patients. Secondly, we investigate other markers of aging (age, total number of chronic diagnoses, new chronic diagnoses, and new acute admissions) and their associations with long-term mortality.METHODS: A cohort study of acutely admitted medical patients aged 65 or older. Survival time within a 3 years post-discharge follow up period was used as the outcome. The associations between the markers and survival time were investigated by Cox regression analyses. For analyses, all markers were grouped by quartiles.RESULTS: A total of 4,005 patients were included. Among the 3,172 patients without a cancer diagnosis, mortality within 3 years was 39.9%. Univariate and multiple regression analyses for each marker showed that all were significantly associated with post-discharge survival. The changes between the estimates for the FI-OutRef quartiles in the univariate- and the multiple analyses were negligible. Among all the markers investigated, FI-OutRef had the highest hazard ratio of the fourth quartile versus the first quartile: 3.45 (95% CI: 2.83-s4.22, P < 0.001).CONCLUSION: Among acutely admitted older medical patients, FI-OutRef was strongly associated with long-term mortality. This association was independent of age, sex, and number of chronic diagnoses, new chronic diagnoses, and new acute admissions. Hence FI-OutRef could be a biomarker of advancement of aging within the acute care setting.

AB - BACKGROUND: Older people have the highest incidence of acute medical admissions. Old age and acute hospital admissions are associated with a high risk of adverse health outcomes after discharge, such as reduced physical performance, readmissions and mortality. Hospitalisations in this population are often by acute admission and through the emergency department. This, along with the rapidly increasing proportion of older people, warrants the need for clinically feasible tools that can systematically assess vulnerability in older medical patients upon acute hospital admission. These are essential for prioritising treatment during hospitalisation and after discharge. Here we explore whether an abbreviated form of the FI-Lab frailty index, calculated as the number of admission laboratory test results outside of the reference interval (FI-OutRef) was associated with long term mortality among acutely admitted older medical patients. Secondly, we investigate other markers of aging (age, total number of chronic diagnoses, new chronic diagnoses, and new acute admissions) and their associations with long-term mortality.METHODS: A cohort study of acutely admitted medical patients aged 65 or older. Survival time within a 3 years post-discharge follow up period was used as the outcome. The associations between the markers and survival time were investigated by Cox regression analyses. For analyses, all markers were grouped by quartiles.RESULTS: A total of 4,005 patients were included. Among the 3,172 patients without a cancer diagnosis, mortality within 3 years was 39.9%. Univariate and multiple regression analyses for each marker showed that all were significantly associated with post-discharge survival. The changes between the estimates for the FI-OutRef quartiles in the univariate- and the multiple analyses were negligible. Among all the markers investigated, FI-OutRef had the highest hazard ratio of the fourth quartile versus the first quartile: 3.45 (95% CI: 2.83-s4.22, P < 0.001).CONCLUSION: Among acutely admitted older medical patients, FI-OutRef was strongly associated with long-term mortality. This association was independent of age, sex, and number of chronic diagnoses, new chronic diagnoses, and new acute admissions. Hence FI-OutRef could be a biomarker of advancement of aging within the acute care setting.

KW - Journal Article

UR - https://bmcgeriatr.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12877-017-0463-y

U2 - 10.1186/s12877-017-0434-3

DO - 10.1186/s12877-017-0434-3

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28249621

VL - 17

JO - B M C Geriatrics

JF - B M C Geriatrics

SN - 1471-2318

IS - 1

M1 - 62

ER -

ID: 177160354