Revision of Frailty Assessment in Kidney Transplant Recipients: Replacing Unintentional Weight Loss with CT‐Assessed Sarcopenia in the Physical Frailty Phenotype

Kidney transplantation (KT) experts did not support the use of subjective unintentional weight loss to measure shrinking in the Physical Frailty Phenotype (PFP); a clinically feasible and predictive measure of shrinking is needed. To test whether unintentional weight loss could be replaced by an assessment of sarcopenia using existing CT scans, we performed a prospective cohort study of adult KT recipients with original PFP (oPFP) measured at admission (12/2008-2/2020). We ascertained sarcopenia by calculating skeletal muscle index from available, clinically obtained CTs within 1-year pre-KT (male<50cm2/m2; female<39cm2/m2) and combined it with the original 4 components to determine new PFP (nPFP) scores. Frailty was classified by frailty score: 0:non-frail;1-2:pre-frail;≥3:frail. Mortality and graft loss hazard ratios (HRs) were estimated using adjusted Cox proportional hazard models. Model discrimination was quantified using Harrell’s C-statistic. Among 1,113 recipients, 18.6% and 17.1% were frail by oPFP and nPFP, respectively. Compared to non-frail recipients, frail patients by either PFP had higher risks of mortality (oPFP HR=1.67,95%CI:1.07-2.62,C=0.710; nPFP HR=1.68,95%CI:1.06-2.66,C=0.710) and graft loss (oPFP HR=1.67,95%CI:1.17-2.40,C=0.631; nPFP HR=1.66,95%CI:1.15-2.40,C=0.634) with similar discriminations. oPFP and nPFP are equally useful in risk prediction for KT recipients; oPFP may aid in screening patients for pre-KT interventions, while nPFP may assist in nuanced clinical decision-making.

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