In a single-centre prospective cohort study, we found strong correlation and agreement between the CFS and the Edmonton Frail Scale in a surgical population. Furthermore, the CFS showed a strong ability to discriminate between people identified as being frail or not frail based on the Edmonton scale. This study also shows that frailty in surgical patients measured by the CFS affects the full spectrum of health, including functional dependence, medication use, physical ability, and nutrition. Consistent with the larger perioperative literature, surgical patients with frailty also had considerably worse postoperative outcomes, with increased complications, higher mortality, and reduced discharge home after surgery.
It is ten years since the NCEPOD recommendation to include frailty screening in surgical risk assessment for older patients.10 Nevertheless, there remains a major gap in perioperative frailty screening. The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland, the American College of Surgeons, and the American Geriatrics Society all similarly emphasize the importance of perioperative frailty measurement.25,26 The Edmonton Frail Scale has been applied in a variety of surgical cohorts, where it has been found predictive of postoperative complications, increased length of stay, and inability to be discharged home after surgery.27 It also has good inter-rater reliability, and correlates well with a comprehensive geriatric assessment.11 There are significant challenges, however, in its widespread application as a screening tool to a surgical population. Half of our cohort, for example, could not undergo the timed-up-and-go test, with a further 13% unable to undergo clock-drawing cognitive assessment because of their decreased conscious state. There is also a time and training requirement, which presents challenges in a busy preoperative assessment clinic, as well as the emergency surgical setting. Because of these challenges, the Edmonton scale has limited scope for widespread deployment in an unselected population at risk for frailty. The CFS thus presents a convenient, easy to deploy screening tool devoid of many of these constraints. The CFS has been well studied in the perioperative literature, and has been shown to be feasible. In the study by McIsaac et al., it was rated by anesthesiologists as easy to use, useful, and beneficial to patient care, and taking a mean (SD) of 44 (40) sec to administer,14 and was associated with poor outcomes in surgical patients. The AUCROC of 0.91 and high degree of correlation between the CFS and Edmonton scales found in this study supports its role as a screening tool in surgical patients. This study also implies that the threshold for frailty measured by both the CFS and Edmonton scales is similar. Nine of ten divergent patients (Edmonton frail, CFS non-frail) had a CFS score of 4 (“vulnerable”), only one point less than the frailty cut-point of 5. Similarly, 18 of 19 patients scored frail via the CFS and non-frail with the Edmonton scale—their Edmonton score was 6–7 (“vulnerable”), which was just one point less than the frailty cut-point score of 8. This indicates that the CFS adequately selects patients for further assessment with a more detailed, granular multidimensional frailty measure such as the Edmonton scale. Although the highest Youden index was seen for a CFS ≥ “mildly frail” (CFS = 5), we advocate that this screening cut-point should be a CFS ≥ 4, which we would have captured in our cohort in all but one Edmonton-scored patient with frailty. This also represents an appropriate balance between specificity and sensitivity; patients selected at this point will likely have Edmonton scores achieving or very near the “vulnerable” threshold, and will likely also benefit from formalized frailty measurement. This formalized assessment is obviously less applicable to emergency surgical patients. In this population, the finding of significantly increased mortality and postoperative complications with frailty (as with other studies) may instead prompt more attention to a shared decision-making process for frail patients.
A major finding of our study was that perioperative frailty affects a wide range of health domains, with screening able to identify particular areas in which health deficits are over-represented in frail surgical patients. This included functional dependence, medication use, physical performance, and malnutrition, and concurs with our recent study into the areas of health affected by frailty in critical illness.15 This is a significant finding, as it implies that follow-up frailty measurement following a screening process must be comprehensive, particularly given recent trends to use hospital databases to construct so-called “frailty” measures. Although these rapid scales are easy to derive, there may be a significant bias towards medical comorbidities, and comparatively little information regarding other equally important domains of frailty. For example, the “modified frailty index”, an automated frailty measure derived from coding data, which has seen numerous publications in the surgical literature, is almost entirely a comorbidity measure.28 It may therefore fail to capture the complex multidimensional state that is frailty, and risk over-simplifying this complex condition to the detriment of future research and potential development of interventions for frail surgical patients.29,30
More recent examples of better-designed electronic frailty indices exist. The “eFI”, derived and validated in primary-care setting data sets in the UK, is a 36-item frailty index that captures a wide range of health deficits.31 It is able to predict mortality, hospitalization, and nursing home admission, but has not been tested in the perioperative setting. A more recent surgical-specific index, the “perioperative frailty index” has been developed by McIsaac’s group using population-based health administrative data in Canada.32 This index comprises 30-items, and in over half-a-million surgical patients was shown to correlate with postoperative death and institutional discharge. In this new era of electronic health records, electronic frailty indices thus represent an extremely useful approach to measuring frailty, however, must be comprehensive across the spectrum of health.
The finding of specific health domains that are disproportionately affected by frailty may also help identify areas that are potentially modifiable perioperatively. For example, the emerging interest in preoperative physical training (“prehabilitation”) may potentially be able to improve physical performance prior to surgery in frail patients. Limited research has shown this potential, with ongoing studies in this area.33,34 Preoperative nutritional support may also be able to reduce the malnutrition seen in surgical patients with frailty.35,36 More research is needed to determine whether these or other interventions can translate to better postoperative outcomes with frailty. Although logistically challenging for emergency surgery, elective surgical timelines may allow such targeted preoperative optimisation. Moreover, in the postoperative period there may be benefit in addressing specific areas of health deficits for individual patients, to reduce overall operative risk.
Strengths of our study are the inclusion of a broad range of both emergency and elective surgical patients across the spectrum of surgical subspecialties, enhancing generalizability. Although other studies have examined the CFS in specific surgical cohorts, including cardiac surgical37 and general surgical patients,38 the inclusion of a wide range of surgical specialties is previously limited within the literature (an exception being McIsaac et al.’s study of 702 non-cardiac surgical patients).14 A further strength is the similarity between included and non-included patients, indicating that our study cohort is likely representative of surgical patients in our institution, as well as the completeness of study data.
A study limitation was the use of both the Edmonton and Reported Edmonton scales, with total scores possibly varying by one point. Although possibly influencing the comparability of scores obtained, we considered this preferable to missing physical performance scores for half of the cohort (107 of 218 patients), which would have made assessment of this frailty domain impossible. A further limitation was the fact our study was conducted in a single hospital, which may reduce generalizability, and also that investigators assigned both frailty scores without blinding nor randomisation of assessment order, potentially biasing measurement. Nevertheless, we consider the risk of bias to be low since CFS and Edmonton scores were assigned based on objective criteria and strict definitions regarding function, independence, and medical disease status, and total Edmonton scores were aggregated after the CFS score was assigned. Moreover, the methodology in this study (data collectors non-blinded to the comparator scale) is similar to that of other studies comparing frailty scales, including in critically ill and other patient populations.39,40 Future research could improve on our and others’ study designs by utilising blinded assessment in frailty measurement, and by having individual patient frailty measured by more than one investigator to assess inter-rater reliability and to explore potential differences in assessments according to healthcare provider background. For example, a recent study in an ICU population revealed similar CFS scores when assigned by raters from medical, research coordinator, or occupational therapy backgrounds.41 This remains unexplored in the perioperative setting. An extension of the study design to compare the CFS with a comprehensive geriatric assessment in surgical patients would also be of value, although we note the significant challenges in administering such a comprehensive tool in the perioperative setting. Forty-two (19%) of our patients were also included in our previous study examining the Edmonton and CFS in ICU patients. Sensitivity analyses, however, showed little impact of inclusion of these patients on overall findings. In particular, the screening performance of the CFS with respect to the Edmonton scale was maintained, association with frailty and baseline demographics preserved, and the finding of worse health status across frailty domains persisted regardless of inclusion or omission of these patients. Therefore, our conclusions about frailty in the perioperative context remain valid.
In conclusion, the CFS is an accurate, sensitive screening tool, with good face and content validity to measure frailty in the perioperative setting. Frailty in surgical patients affects the spectrum of health-related domains, which are important to include in candidate frailty measurement instruments. Higher risk patients should be screened for frailty prior to anesthesia with a cut-point of a CFS ≥ 4 selecting those for more comprehensive measurement. This may help identify particular health domains amenable to interventions to reduce the impact of perioperative frailty.