Background: As the World Trade Center (WTC) General Responder Cohort ages, it is imperative to study their aging process and identify factors that can be targeted for interventions.
Objectives: Our goal was to utilize a previously developed WTC Clinical Frailty Index (CFI) to identify distinct frailty trajectories and associated factors in this cohort.
Design: A latent class mixed model evaluated frailty trajectories using WTC CFIs. Multinomial regression models were used to assess associations between frailty trajectory and sociodemographic and WTC characteristics.
Setting: We utilized data collected during routine WTC monitoring visits from 2004 until 2021.
Participants: The participants were WTC general responders.
Measurements: Relative risk ratios (RRR) assessed associations with a 95 % confidence interval (CI).
Results: Three distinct linear frailty trajectories were identified: high CFI (indicating higher frailty), low CFI, and progressively increasing CFI. Compared with the low CFI group, females were more likely to be in the high CFI and progressively increasing CFI groups (RRR 1.66, 95 %CI 1.46, 1.90; RRR 1.32, 95 %CI 1.15, 1.53, respectively). Education beyond high school and elevated income were protective against high CFI and progressively increasing CFI groups. Individuals that self-identified as Hispanic had an elevated RRR for the high CFI group (RRR 1.17, 95 %CI 1.04, 1.31). Occupation on 9/11, such as construction and maintenance and repair, as well as high/very high WTC exposure were significantly associated with both the high CFI and progressively increasing CFI groups.
Conclusions: Several sociodemographic and WTC variables were associated with more hazardous frailty trajectories in WTC general responders. This work is beneficial to informing and directing future interventions for those at higher-risk for more hazardous frailty progression.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tjfa.2025.100027 | DOI Listing |
JAMA Netw Open
March 2025
Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill.
Importance: Frailty assessed at a single time point is associated with mortality in older women with breast cancer. Little is known about how changes in frailty following cancer treatment initiation affect mortality.
Objective: To evaluate the association between claims-based frailty trajectories following adjuvant chemotherapy initiation and 5-year mortality in older women with stage I to III breast cancer.
Eur Geriatr Med
March 2025
Center on Aging and Health, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Purpose: Frailty is a well-established risk factor for adverse health outcomes, yet its dynamic nature and predictors remain partially understood. This study aimed to investigate factors influencing frailty transitions and mortality risk among community-dwelling older adults.
Methods: We conducted a longitudinal study using a 9-year follow-up data from the Health, Well-being, and Aging Study (SABE, as known in Portuguese).
Purpose: To investigate the classification and characteristics of frailty transition in older adults over a 1-year period.
Method: A three-wave mailed cohort survey was conducted in a community setting. Data from 361 participants who answered all items were analyzed.
Lancet Healthy Longev
February 2025
Division of Anaesthetics, Pain Management and Intensive Care, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, London, UK; Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London, UK.
Background: Shared decision making (SDM) in treatment escalation planning (TEP) involves patients and clinicians determining together a contingency for future health deterioration. Patients' role in health-care decision making is subject to ongoing debate. This study aimed to understand the perspectives of older patients in the UK on SDM in TEP for the acute hospital setting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Frailty Aging
March 2025
Brookdale Department of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, 1 Gustave Levy Place New York, NY 10029, USA; Geriatrics Research, Education and Clinical Center, James J. Peters VA Medical Center, 130 West Kingsbridge Road, Bronx, NY 10468, USA.
Background: As the World Trade Center (WTC) General Responder Cohort ages, it is imperative to study their aging process and identify factors that can be targeted for interventions.
Objectives: Our goal was to utilize a previously developed WTC Clinical Frailty Index (CFI) to identify distinct frailty trajectories and associated factors in this cohort.
Design: A latent class mixed model evaluated frailty trajectories using WTC CFIs.
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