720 likes | 1.18k Views
Inside every older person is a younger person. . wondering what the hell happened. ~Jennifer Yane. Goal: Integrate function into usual care of older adults. Rationale*: directs immediate service needs helps summarize total burden of diseasedetects change in statuspredicts tolerance to stres
E N D
1. Meaning and Change in Physical Performance How can we infuse geriatric thinking into health care?
My experience with mobility
as an indicator of function
2. Inside every older person is a younger person…. wondering what the hell happened.
~Jennifer Yane
3. Goal: Integrate function into usual care of older adults Rationale*:
directs immediate service needs
helps summarize total burden of disease
detects change in status
predicts tolerance to stressful health events
Predicts future status of everything…
4. Challenges busy clinical care often driven by quick triage based on numbers
current function interviews may be long and qualitative for clinicians
no diagnostic codes
providers, patients and families have been acculturated to think in diagnostic terms
5. Strategy take lay meaning and turn it into numbers
make numbers interpretable
provide simple numbers to patients and providers
let patients and providers internalize meaning
Why numbers???
6. Why Numbers? Doctors feel comfortable with them
Perceptions of medicine and technology
Improves calibration of impressions between observers
Commonly used numbers can drive provider and patient behavior: blood pressure, blood sugar, body weight
7. Aging and mobility: a rationale An 86 year old widowed woman is followed in your clinic for hypertension, diabetes, osteoarthritis, and mild renal insufficiency .
8. Mobility as one summary indicator of function Transfers and walking are core self care activities
Many other self care activities like dressing and bathing are heavily influenced by mobility
Many household management activities are heavily influenced by mobility
9. Significance of Mobility Problems of Aging Ubiquitous
Disabling
Constraining
Distressing
Increase need for help by others
10. Meaning and Mobility: the public Books
Movies
Common language of illness and recovery
“slowing down”
“still has a spring in his step”
13. Meaning and mobility: providers Global health status and QOL indicators:
SF 36
Euroqol
Disease specific indicators:
heart
stroke
cancer
Parkinson’s disease
14. Mobility as a good geriatric indicator Extensive epidemiological literature re ability to predict functional decline, mortality, utilization, falls
Extensive biomechanical and physiological literature re mechanisms, alterations with age and disease
Brief assessment is feasible in the clinical setting
? A “vital sign”
Efficiency and utility of screening in clinical populations?
How to interpret results clinically?
15. Challenges: a complex topic into a simple indicator? Mobility is a complex phenomenon-simple indicators miss much important information
Providers use other simple indicators: blood pressure, pulse, weight…
Can very brief mobility indicators be a “foot in the door”?
16. The meaning of a gait velocity
17. The meaning of a gait velocity
18. Challenges- no common standards Velocity: meters/second, feet per second, miles per hour
Time: 10 feet, 4 meters, 10 meters, 50 feet walk
Distance: 6 minute walk, 400 meter walk
Metrics rarely translated
Lack of overt link to meaning
19. Translating walking speed: making the numbers mean something Meters per second= miles per hour
20. Translating walking speed: making the numbers mean somethingwalking speed, METS and function
21. Translating walking speed: making the numbers mean somethingwalking speed and 6 minute walk test
26. Mobility measures to describe research populations
27. Mobility measures in routine primary care 14 Primary care offices: space available, staff can perform during routine care
Gait speed measure takes < 2 minutes during intake as part of “vital signs”.
Reliability comparable to slightly worse than BP
coefficient of variation
interobserver test-retest
4.5% gait 3.0% DBP 15% gait, 10% DBP
28. Mobility performance as a baseline predictor of future status Mobility measures:
gait speed
SPPB: 12 point Short Physical Performance Battery (gait speed, timed chair rise, tandem stands)
Explain current and future function
Predict utilization
Predict survival
30. Moving beyond baseline: meaningful change in performance How much change matters?
What is a reasonable gold standard?
statistical?
distal events?
patient opinion?
provider opinion?
31. One year change rates based on two methods: annual (two time points) or quarterly (every 3 months for one year)
32. Statistical distribution approaches to the definition of meaningful change Effect size: given sample distributions, estimate magnitude of measure change
Standard error of the mean
Challenges: influenced by sample heterogeneity, assumes symmetric decline and improvement
33. Anchor based method-individual change Use “gold standard” self, significant other or provider estimates
Two methods:
transition: “better/same/worse”
repeated current state: use self-estimate at two time points.
Compare mean performance change in those who report change vs those who don’t
Challenges: direction of change, thresholds, nonlinearities, response shift, poor association between transition form and repeated current status form
34. Meaningful change in gait speed (m/sec) using several methods and data sets
35. Meaningful change in 6 minute walk and SPPB using several methods and data sets
36. Intervention effects in recent clinical trials: can use proportions to determine NNT
37. Provider anchors: estimates of meaningful change in a frailty study Prospective cohort study of geriatricians and their patients.
Geriatricians assess change in frailty during routine clinic visits every 6 months.
Instrument developed from patient, caregiver and geriatrician priorities. Scale runs from 1 (marked improvement) to 7 (marked worsening).
Structured global assessment format includes 6 “intrinsic” domains (CGIF-Int) and 13 overall domains (CGIF-All).
Patients have home assessments by research staff every 6 months for manifestations of frailty (impairments, functional limitations, disability, health status).
38. Provider estimates of meaningful change: frailty studyPreliminary findings 23 geriatricians (43% female)
237 patients (mean age 80, 78% female, 15% non-white).
Frailty by geriatrician CGIF-Int worsened in 31 %, improved in 16% and did not change in 53%. Similar effects for CGIF-All
39. Factors that Influenced Geriatrician’s Rating of Change in Frailty
40. Factors that influenced geriatrician’s ratings of frailty
43. Change as an independent predictor of survival Assess the magnitude and patterns of change over one year in 6 measures of health and function
estimate effects on five or seven year survival.
45. PEP study: monitor change every three months in index year, then assess survival over subsequent years
48. Transient and Persistent Changeadjusted for age, gender, number of comorbid domains and baseline status
49. Mortality Rates Among Groups with No Decline, Transient Decline and Persistent Decline
50. One year improvement and 5 year survival
51. Improvement and Survival (gait speed) (gait speed ever improved 0.1 m/s compared to baseline, subsequent 7 year survival)
52. 0.1 m/s improvement in baseline slower walkers (<.89 m/s)
53. 0.1 m/s improvement in baseline faster walkers >.89 m/s
54. Bidirectional assessment: no change, improvement, decline, and mixed improvement/decline
55. Patient experience and daily activity: another way to count Restricted activity days are a powerful indicator of health and prognosis (Gill, Nevitt)
Restricted activity has high potential for meaning among patients
May be useful in conditions with periods of inactivity eg cancer treatment, COPD or CHF exacerbations, recovery from disabling events like hip fracture, stroke
56. High frequency low burden indicator of daily activity:“days in state” Five item daily diary:
half day out of bed
left home without help
difficulty with daily activities
difficulty moving around
fatigue
Pilot testing in our ongoing cohort study for initial standards, also in older cancer treatment patients
57. Baseline characteristics
58. Effect of baseline ECOG score on status at 6 weeks
59. Conclusions Meaning of measures and concepts is based on personal familiarity, experience
Mobility status can reflect the experience of patients and providers with current states and with transitions of health and function
Simple measures of mobility performance (and maybe counts of daily activity) may be useful for translating experience into meaningful numerical indicators
60. Where are we? We can define preliminary thresholds and magnitudes of meaningful change for gait speed, 6 minute walk distance and possibly SPPB
61. Future Directions: measures Utility of mobility states with M Goldstein (Palo Alto VA and Stanford)
Use thresholds and magnitudes of change in our clinical trials to generate NNTs
Estimate prognosis of change against future utilization and function
Examine subgroup effects: baseline status, age, gender… on change effect sizes
Further studies with daily activity indicators
62. Future Directions: applications Differential diagnosis of mobility and balance disorders
Intervention studies- common data set across Pitt Pepper Studies
Feedback and self-monitoring of gait speed? (for healthy aging: like weight, blood pressure, blood sugar)
65. How old would you be if you didn't know how old you were? ~Satchel Paige