Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0137127
Title: The low fall as a surrogate marker of frailty predicts long-term mortality in older trauma patients
Authors: Wong T.H. 
Nguyen H.V. 
Chiu M.T.
Chow K.Y.
Ong M.E.H. 
Lim G.H. 
Nadkarni N.V. 
Bautista D.C.T. 
Cheng J.Y.X.
Loo L.M.A.
Seow D.C.C.
Keywords: adult
age
aged
Article
blunt trauma
cause of death
cohort analysis
comorbidity
controlled study
death
disease marker
disease severity
falling
female
frailty
gender
height
high risk patient
hospital admission
human
injury scale
major clinical study
male
middle aged
mortality
patient
prediction
register
revised trauma score
risk assessment
scoring system
sensitivity analysis
Singapore
trauma patient
very elderly
weakness
emergency health service
falling
fracture
hospital emergency service
statistical model
biological marker
Accidental Falls
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Biomarkers
Comorbidity
Emergency Service, Hospital
Female
Fractures, Bone
Humans
Injury Severity Score
Logistic Models
Male
Middle Aged
Registries
Singapore
Trauma Centers
Wounds, Nonpenetrating
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: Public Library of Science
Citation: Wong T.H., Nguyen H.V., Chiu M.T., Chow K.Y., Ong M.E.H., Lim G.H., Nadkarni N.V., Bautista D.C.T., Cheng J.Y.X., Loo L.M.A., Seow D.C.C. (2015). The low fall as a surrogate marker of frailty predicts long-term mortality in older trauma patients. PLoS ONE 10 (9) : e0137127. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0137127
Abstract: Background: Frailty is associated with adverse outcomes including disability, mortality and risk of falls. Trauma registries capture a broad range of injuries. However, frail patients who fall comprise a large proportion of the injuries occurring in ageing populations and are likely to have different outcomes compared to non-frail injured patients. The effect of frail fallers on mortality is under-explored but potentially significant. Currently, many trauma registries define low falls as less than three metres, a height that is likely to include non-frailty falls. We hypothesized that the low fall from less than 0.5 metres, including same-level falls, is a surrogate marker of frailty and predicts long-term mortality in older trauma patients. Methods: Using data from the Singapore National Trauma Registry, 2011-2013, matched till September 2014 to the death registry, we analysed adults aged over 45 admitted via the emergency department in public hospitals sustaining blunt injuries with an injury severity score (ISS) of 9 or more, excluding isolated hip fractures from same-level falls in the over 65. Patients injured by a low fall were compared to patients injured by high fall and other blunt mechanisms. Logistic regression was used to analyze 12-month mortality, controlling for mechanism of injury, ISS, revised trauma score (RTS), co-morbidities, gender, age and age-gender interaction. Different low fall height definitions, adjusting for injury regions, and analyzing the entire adult cohort were used in sensitivity analyses and did not change our findings. Results: Of the 8111 adults in our cohort, patients who suffered low falls were more likely to die of causes unrelated to their injuries (p<0.001), compared to other blunt trauma and higher fall heights. They were at higher risk of 12-month mortality (OR 1.75, 95% CI 1.18-2.58, p = 0.005), independent of ISS, RTS, age, gender, age-gender interaction and co-morbidities. Falls that were higher than 0.5m did not show this pattern. Males were at higher risk of mortality after low falls. The effect of age on mortality started at age 55 for males, and age 70 for females, and the difference was attributable to the additional mortality in male low-fallers. Conclusions: The low fall mechanism can optimize prediction of long-term mortality after moderate and severe injury, and may be a surrogate marker of frailty, complementing broader-based studies on aging. Copyright: © 2015 Wong et al.
Source Title: PLoS ONE
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/165684
ISSN: 19326203
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0137127
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