Resumen
Frail older adults are at increased risk of poor clinical outcomes. Frailty assessment is therefore important in clinical trials to understand the benefits and harms of interventions. However, consensus is lacking on how frailty should be assessed. We developed a prospectively specified index using a battery of formal tests and instruments and a retrospectively generated index using medical comorbidities and patient reported outcomes (PROs) within an adjuvanted recombinant zoster vaccine (RZV) trial (NCT02979639). For both frailty indices (FIs), a total deficit score was calculated as the accumulation of deficits and participants were categorized as non-frail, pre-frail and frail. We assessed (1) the feasibility and validity of both FIs; (2) the impact of RZV vaccine reactogenicity by frailty status on Short Form-36 [SF-36] physical functioning (PF) scores. Of 401 participants, aged ≥50 years, 236 (58.9%) were categorized non-frail, 143 (35.7%), pre-frail, and 22 (5.5%) frail using the prospective FI. Corresponding numbers for the retrospective FI were 192 (47.9%), 169 (42.1%) and 40 (10.0%), respectively. Strong concordance was observed between the frailty status assessments (P < .001). The proportion defined as frail increased from 1.5%, to 10.4% in participants aged 50–59, and ≥70 years, respectively, for the prospective FI. Corresponding numbers for the retrospective FI were 3.7%, and 17.2%, respectively. RZV vaccination was associated with a transient, non-clinically meaningful, decrease on the SF-36 PF score in frail participants. Both frailty indices provided similar results. The retrospectively generated FI offers the advantage of being easier to incorporate into vaccine clinical trials of older adults.
Idioma original | English |
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Páginas (desde-hasta) | 2960-2968 |
Número de páginas | 9 |
Publicación | Human Vaccines and Immunotherapeutics |
Volumen | 15 |
N.º | 12 |
DOI | |
Estado | Published - dic. 2 2019 |
Nota bibliográfica
Funding Information:This work was funded by GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals SA. GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals SA was involved in all stages of the study and covered all costs associated with developing and publishing this manuscript. KES received support from the National Institute on Aging, Duke Pepper Older Americans Independence Center P30AG028716. The authors would like to thank the study participants, investigators and study teams involved in this trial, as well as Brecht Geeraerts (GSK; supervised the protocol development) and Pierre Simonet (GSK; participated in the initial drafting of the prospective frailty index). Editorial assistance and publication coordination were provided by Quentin Deraedt (XPE Pharma and Science c/o GSK).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, © 2019 GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals SA. Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Immunology and Allergy
- Immunology
- Pharmacology
PubMed: MeSH publication types
- Clinical Trial, Phase III
- Journal Article
- Multicenter Study
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't