Assessments of frailty in bladder cancer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS:The incidence of frailty is increasing as the population ages,
which has important clinical implications given the associations between frailty and
poor outcomes in the bladder cancer population. Due to a multi-organ system decline
and decreased physiologic reserve, frail patients are vulnerable to stressors of disease
and have poorer mortality and morbidity rates than their nonfrail peers. The association
between frailty and poor outcomes has been documented across multiple populations,
including radical cystectomy, creating a need for frailty assessments to be used preoperatively
for risk stratification. We aim to provide a review of the common frailty assessments
and their relevance to radical cystectomy patients. FINDINGS:A variety of assessments
for frailty exist, from short screening items to comprehensive geriatric assessments.
The syndrome spans multiple organ systems, as do the potential diagnostic instruments.
Some instruments are less practical for use in clinical practice by urologists, such
as the Canadian Study of Health and Aging Frailty Index and Comprehensive Geriatric
Assessment. The tool most studied in radical cystectomy is the modified Frailty Index,
associated with high grade complications and 30-days mortality. Frailty often coexists
with malnutrition and sarcopenia, stressing the importance of screening for and addressing
these syndromes to improve patient's perioperative outcomes. CONCLUSIONS:There is
no universally agreed upon frailty assessment, but the most studied in radical cystectomy
is the modified Frailty Index, providing valuable data with which to counsel patients
preoperatively. Alterations in immune phenotypes provide potential future diagnostic
biomarkers for frailty.
Type
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20746Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1016/j.urolonc.2020.04.036Publication Info
Grimberg, Dominic C; Shah, Ankeet; Molinger, Jeroen; Whittle, John; Gupta, Rajan T;
Wischmeyer, Paul E; ... Inman, Brant A (2020). Assessments of frailty in bladder cancer. Urologic oncology. 10.1016/j.urolonc.2020.04.036. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20746.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Dominic Grimberg
House Staff
Rajan Tilak Gupta
Professor of Radiology
Abdominal Imaging; Multiparametric MR imaging of prostate cancer; MR imaging of the
hepatobiliary system; Applications of dual energy CT in the abdomen and pelvis
Brant Allen Inman
Professor of Surgery
Clinical research interests: Clinical trials of novel diagnostic tests and therapies
for genitourinary malignancies, with a strong focus on bladder cancer. Basic science
research interests: Immune therapies for cancer, hyperthermia and heat-based treatment
of cancer, molecular biology of genitourinary cancers, novel diagnostics and therapies
for genitourinary cancers
Shelley R McDonald
Associate Professor of Medicine
Ankeet Shah
Assistant Professor of Urology
John Whittle
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
I am a UK trained Anesthesiologist with special interests in Critical Care and Perioperative
Medicine. I aim to combine my clinical practice with my research interests to reduce
the risks associated with Major Surgery for all patients, but especially those at
highest risk of complications.My research interests are in preoperative optimization,
including exercise and nutritional prehabilitation, as well as investigating how subclinical
autonomic dysfunction impacts on key outcom
Paul Edmund Wischmeyer
Professor of Anesthesiology
Paul Wischmeyer M.D., EDIC, FASPEN, FCCM is a critical care, perioperative, and nutrition
physician-researcher who specializes in enhancing preparation and recovery from surgery,
critical care and COVID-19. He serves as a Tenured Professor of Anesthesiology and
Surgery at Duke. He also serves as the Associate Vice Chair for Clinical Research
in the Dept. of Anesthesiology and Director of the TPN/Nutrition Team at Duke. Dr.
Wischmeyer earned his medical degree with honors at T
Alphabetical list of authors with Scholars@Duke profiles.

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