Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The goal of this observational study is to learn if simple tests for frailty and muscle strength can help predict which older adults (age 65 and older) are at higher risk for problems after major abdominal surgery.
The main questions it aims to answer are:
Participants will:
Full description
This observational study aims to assess whether brief, objective frailty and muscle-strength tests can be feasibly incorporated into routine preoperative evaluations and whether these assessments predict postoperative complications in older adults undergoing elective major abdominal surgery. The broader clinical objective is to enhance perioperative risk stratification using multidimensional frailty measurements.
Study Procedures:
Eligible participants aged 65 years or older scheduled for elective major abdominal surgeries (including colorectal, hepatobiliary, gynecologic, and urologic procedures) will undergo a structured frailty assessment battery during their standard preoperative clinic visit. This battery includes:
All assessments will be performed by trained clinical research personnel. The entire battery is anticipated to take approximately 20 minutes per participant.
Postoperatively, participant medical records will be reviewed at 30 and 90 days to identify and document complications, ICU admissions, hospital length of stay, discharge disposition, and mortality.
Quality Assurance and Data Validation:
Data Dictionary and Coding:
A detailed data dictionary outlining each variable, units, normal range, and coding schemes is maintained in REDCap. Frailty measures include both raw continuous data and binary categorical flags indicating normal versus abnormal based on established normative values from published consensus guidelines.
Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs):
The following SOPs ensure standardized study execution:
Sample Size Justification:
The target enrollment of 100 participants provides 80% power to detect moderate correlations (rho ≥0.3) between frailty measures and postoperative complication outcomes, assuming a complication rate of approximately 25%. This sample size also enables adequate power for logistic regression analyses with up to 10 predictors.
Plan for Missing Data:
Missing data will be minimized by rigorous training and immediate data entry verification. In cases where missing data occur, multiple imputation techniques (using chained equations with five iterations) will be employed if ≥5% of values for key predictors or outcomes are missing. Single imputation methods will be avoided except in instances of minimal (<5%) missingness.
Statistical Analysis Plan:
Descriptive statistics will summarize demographic characteristics and frailty test results. Continuous variables will be assessed for normality and summarized appropriately.
For primary analyses:
Logistic regression models will evaluate the predictive capability of frailty measures for postoperative complications.
Model performance metrics will include Area Under the ROC (Receiver Operating Curve), calibration slope and intercept, Brier score, and calibration plots.
For correlations between frailty measures and Clinical Frailty Scale:
Spearman rank correlations and poly-serial correlations will be employed as appropriate for ordinal variables.
All analyses will be conducted using R version 4.3.2 with reproducible seeds set for transparency.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Participants may be eligible for this study if they meet the following conditions:
Exclusion criteria
Participants will not be eligible for the study if they have any of the following conditions:
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal