Elderly patients with severe aortic stenosis (AS) need individualized decision-making in their management in order to benefit in terms of survival and improvement of quality of life. Frailty, a common condition in elderly patients, needs to be considered when weighing treatment options. We aimed to evaluate outcomes including survival and functional parameters according to disability criteria at six years of follow-up in an older population treated for severe AS using a frailty-based management. We evaluated data derived from a pilot clinical project involving elderly patients with severe AS referred to a tailored management based on classification by Fried's score into pre-frail, early frail, and frail and a multidimensional geriatric assessment. A Frailty, Inflammation, Malnutrition, and Sarcopenia (FIMS) score was used to predict the risk of mortality at six years of follow-up. Functional status was evaluated by telephonic interview. At six years of follow-up, we found a survival rate of 40%. It was higher in the pre-frail patients (long rank < 0.001) and in the patients who underwent TAVR treatment (long rank < 0.001). The cut-off FIMS score value of ≥1.28 was an independent determinant associated with a higher risk of mortality at six years of follow-up (HR 2.91; CI 95% 1.7-5.1; -value 0.001). We found a moderate increase of disability levels, malnutrition status, comorbidities, and number of drugs, but none of them self-reported advanced NYHA class III-IV heart failure. An accurate clinical-instrumental and functional geriatric evaluation in an elderly population with AS is required for a non-futile interventional treatment in terms of survival and functional status even in long-term follow-up.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm14121164DOI Listing

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