Transitions in frailty states and associated factors: a multistate analysis of the Italian Longitudinal Study on Aging population-based cohort
Lucia Galluzzo, Marianna Noale, Stefania Maggi, Marzia Baldereschi, Antonio Di Carlo, Nicola Veronese, Marco Silano

TL;DR
This study tracks how frailty changes over time in older Italians, finding that about 20% can improve within three years, and socio-psychological factors strongly influence these changes.
Contribution
The study introduces a multistate modeling approach to analyze frailty transitions and identifies socio-psychological factors as key predictors of frailty progression.
Findings
Frailty remission or improvement is possible for about 20% of individuals within three years.
Women are more likely to experience worsening frailty, while men have a higher risk of death.
Depressive symptoms are the strongest predictor of frailty worsening in both sexes.
Abstract
•1931 frailty transitions observed during ∼9 years in a population-based cohort ≥65.•Multistate modelling to predict transitions and related factors at different time intervals.•Ample chance of frailty remission/improvement for both sexes (∼20 % at 3-year).•Women have a higher probability of frailty worsening (and resilience) while men of death.•Socio-psychological factors play a determinant role in the development of frailty. 1931 frailty transitions observed during ∼9 years in a population-based cohort ≥65. Multistate modelling to predict transitions and related factors at different time intervals. Ample chance of frailty remission/improvement for both sexes (∼20 % at 3-year). Women have a higher probability of frailty worsening (and resilience) while men of death. Socio-psychological factors play a determinant role in the development of frailty. Background: Frailty is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFrailty in Older Adults · Aging and Gerontology Research · Chronic Disease Management Strategies
