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HIV Medicine - 2022 - Levett - A cross%E2%80%90sectional assessment of frailty falls and perceptions of ageing in people living.pdf (603.87 kB)

A cross-sectional assessment of frailty, falls and perceptions of ageing in people living with HIV using an mHealth platform

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posted on 2023-06-15, 20:41 authored by Thomas LevettThomas Levett, Jaime Vera RojasJaime Vera Rojas, Chris JonesChris Jones, Stephen BremnerStephen Bremner, Agathe Leon, Josep Begovac, Ludwig Apers, Margarida Borges, Sime Zekan, Eugenio Teofilo, Felipe Garcia, Jennifer Whetham
Objective To evaluate frailty, falls and perceptions of ageing among clinically stable individuals with HIV, engaged with remote healthcare delivered via a novel smartphone application. Methods Multi-centre European cross-sectional, questionnaire-based sub-study of EmERGE participants. Frailty was assessed using the five-item FRAIL scale. Present criteria were summed and categorised: 0=robust, 1-2=pre-frail, 3-5=frail. Falls history and EQ-5D-5L quality of life measure were completed. Participants were asked their felt age and personal satisfaction with ageing. Result 1373 participated, mean age 45(±9.8). Frailty was uncommon at 2%. 12.4% fell in the previous year, 58.8% of these recurrently. Mood symptoms and pain were prevalent at 43.3% and 31.8% respectively. Ageing satisfaction was high at 76.4%, with 74.6% feeling younger than their chronological age; mean felt age was 39.3 years. In multivariable analysis mood symptoms and pain were positively associated with frailty, falls and ageing dissatisfaction. An increase in pain severity and mood symptoms were respectively associated with 34% and 63% increased odds of pre-frailty/frailty. An increment in pain symptoms was associated with a 71% increase in odds of falling. Pain was associated with ageing poorly, as were mood symptoms with odds of dissatisfaction increased by 34% per increment in severity. Conclusions Though uncommon, frailty, falls, and ageing dissatisfaction were seen in a younger cohort with medically stable HIV-infection using a remote care model, promoting screening as advocated by European guidelines. These were more common in those with pain or mood symptoms, which should be proactively managed in clinical care, and explored further in future research.

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Published version

Journal

HIV Medicine

ISSN

1464-2662

Publisher

Wiley

Page range

1-10

Department affiliated with

  • Clinical and Experimental Medicine Publications

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2022-09-01

First Open Access (FOA) Date

2022-11-02

First Compliant Deposit (FCD) Date

2022-08-31

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