Impact of impaired intrinsic capacity on postoperative frailty in elderly patients undergoing colorectal surgery: study protocol for a single-center, prospective, cohort study
Jirun Wang, Shaoqi Tian, Lei Zhang, Jia Liu, Yuefang Liu, Lei Zhu, Peipei Shan, Ping Zhao, Yang Zhao, Youzhuang Zhu

TL;DR
This study investigates how preoperative decline in intrinsic capacity affects postoperative frailty in elderly patients undergoing colorectal surgery.
Contribution
It introduces a prospective cohort study to explore the link between impaired intrinsic capacity and postoperative frailty in elderly surgical patients.
Findings
Participants will be classified based on preoperative intrinsic capacity scores to assess postoperative frailty risk.
The study will evaluate multiple outcomes, including pain, recovery quality, and fall risk, to understand frailty progression.
Results may guide targeted interventions to reduce frailty risk in elderly patients with impaired intrinsic capacity.
Abstract
Frailty is characterized by a decline in multiple physiological systems, increasing vulnerability to stressors such as surgery and anesthesia. A decline in intrinsic capacity is common among elderly populations and has been demonstrated to be a predictor of frailty in community-dwelling seniors. However, the relationship between preoperative intrinsic capacity decline and postoperative frailty in surgical patients remains unclear. This study is a single-center, prospective, cohort study. The study will recruit participants aged 60 years and above who are scheduled to undergo elective colorectal surgery. Participants will be classified into an exposed group (intrinsic capacity score ≤ 8) and a non-exposed group (intrinsic capacity score ≥ 9) according to their preoperative intrinsic capacity assessment. The primary outcome is the risk of frailty in elderly patients with impaired…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFrailty in Older Adults · Cardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical Outcomes · Nutrition and Health in Aging
