METFORMIN TO TARGET FRAILTY IN OLDER ADULTS
Sara Espinoza, Nicolas Musi

TL;DR
A clinical trial found that metformin may slow frailty progression in older adults with glucose intolerance.
Contribution
First long-term trial showing metformin reduces frailty progression in older adults.
Findings
Metformin significantly reduced frailty progression rate per month by frailty index.
No serious adverse events were observed with metformin administration.
No significant difference in frailty progression by Fried criteria.
Abstract
It has been postulated that metformin may extend healthspan, but no long-term trials have been done in humans. We conducted a randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled clinical trial of metformin to reduce frailty in older adults (≥65 years) with glucose intolerance. Participants who were frail at baseline (Fried criteria) were excluded. Participants were randomized to 24 months of metformin (initiated at 500 mg/day and titrated to maximum tolerated dose up to 2,000 mg/day) or matching placebo. All participants received one session of diet and exercise counseling prior to initiation of study drug. The primary outcome was frailty as measured by the frailty index based on deficit accumulation model and frailty phenotype based on Fried criteria, which was assessed every 6 months. We applied generalized estimating equations (GEE) models to examine the change in frailty per month by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFrailty in Older Adults · Metabolism, Diabetes, and Cancer · Chronic Disease Management Strategies
