Digestive Diseases and Frailty in Middle-Aged and Older Chinese Adults: A Longitudinal Study
Hongmei Jiao, Jiaxin Li

TL;DR
This study finds that non-cancerous digestive diseases increase the risk of frailty in older Chinese adults, suggesting the need for early intervention.
Contribution
The study establishes a novel link between nonneoplastic digestive diseases and frailty in middle-aged and older Chinese adults.
Findings
Nonneoplastic digestive diseases independently increased frailty risk with a hazard ratio of 1.250.
Triglycerides and HbA1c partially mediated the association between digestive diseases and frailty.
Inflammation-related markers did not significantly mediate the observed relationship.
Abstract
Frailty, characterized by reduced physiological reserves and diminished stress response, is linked to chronic diseases. However, its association with nonneoplastic digestive diseases remains underexplored. This study investigates this relationship among middle-aged and older Chinese adults using data from the 2011–2018 China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS). Frailty was assessed using a 32-item frailty index (FI > 0.25), and nonneoplastic digestive diseases were identified through self-reported diagnoses. Cox proportional hazards models and Restricted Cubic Splines (RCS) were employed to examine associations, while mediation analysis evaluated the roles of inflammation-related markers (leukocytes, platelets, platelet-to-leukocyte ratio [PWR], and C-reactive protein [CRP]) and nutrition-related markers (triglycerides [TG] and glycosylated hemoglobin [HbA1c]). Among 8,507…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFrailty in Older Adults · Nutrition and Health in Aging · Chronic Disease Management Strategies
