# Heterogeneity Within Frailty: Physiological Reserve Phenotypes and Postoperative Recovery After Abdominal Surgery

**Authors:** Rafał Cudnik, Luigi Marano, Elena Montanari, Alessandra Marano, Eugenia Semeraro, Mauro Santarelli, Tomasz Cwalinski, Sergii Girnyi, Filippo Luca Fimognari, Virginia Boccardi

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm15031249 · Journal of Clinical Medicine · 2026-02-04

## TL;DR

This study shows that combining frailty and muscle strength better predicts hospital stay after surgery than age alone.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a new method of combining frailty and muscle strength to classify patients into physiological reserve phenotypes for improved postoperative risk assessment.

## Key findings

- Frailty and oncologic surgery were independently linked to longer hospital stays, while chronological age was not.
- Combining frailty and handgrip strength identified four phenotypes with distinct postoperative length-of-stay patterns.
- Fit–Strong patients had the shortest hospital stays, while Frail–Weak patients had the longest and most variable stays.

## Abstract

Background: Chronological age inadequately captures biological vulnerability among surgical patients. Frailty and muscle strength reflect physiological reserve, yet their combined contribution to postoperative length of stay (LOS) remains insufficiently explored. Methods: We conducted a prospective multicenter observational cohort study including 223 adults undergoing elective abdominal surgery. Frailty was assessed using the Fried phenotype, and admission handgrip strength (HGS) was measured with a calibrated dynamometer. Prolonged LOS was defined as >10 days (75th percentile) and also analyzed continuously using ln(LOS + 1). Multivariable logistic and linear regression models adjusted for age, sex, frailty status, and surgical indication. Patients were additionally stratified into four physiological reserve phenotypes combining frailty and HGS. Results: LOS ranged from 0 to 68 days; a total of 48 patients (21.6%) experienced prolonged hospitalization. In multivariable logistic regression, frailty (adjusted OR 3.12, 95% CI 1.72–5.67) and oncologic surgery (adjusted OR 7.63, 95% CI 3.12–18.65) were independently associated with prolonged LOS, whereas chronological age was not. Female sex was associated with lower odds of prolonged LOS (adjusted OR 0.39, 95% CI 0.18–0.87). Similar associations were observed when LOS was analyzed continuously. Physiological reserve phenotyping revealed graded LOS distributions: Fit–Strong patients had the shortest stays (mean 5.5 ± 4.3 days), while Frail–Weak patients experienced the longest and most variable hospitalization. Conclusions: Postoperative LOS clusters according to multidimensional physiological reserve rather than chronological age. Integrating frailty and muscle strength identifies clinically meaningful phenotypes that may improve perioperative risk stratification beyond age-based approaches and inform personalized perioperative planning, resource allocation, and patient-centered decision-making across heterogeneous surgical populations in worldwide settings.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Frailty (MESH:D000073496)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

55 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12898188/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12898188