# Early Postoperative Physical Frailty Reflects Functional Vulnerability and Predicts Prolonged Hospitalization After Major Cardiovascular Surgery

**Authors:** Seoyon Yang, Younji Kim, Suk-Won Song, Ha Lee, Myeong Su Kim, You Gyoung Yi

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/life16030395 · 2026-02-28

## TL;DR

This study shows that physical frailty detected soon after major heart surgery is linked to longer hospital stays, offering a new way to assess patient risk.

## Contribution

The study introduces early postoperative physical frailty as a novel predictor of prolonged hospitalization after cardiovascular surgery.

## Key findings

- 308 out of 441 patients were classified as frail based on physical performance indicators.
- Frailty was independently associated with prolonged hospital length of stay (IRR 1.38).
- Frailty was not significantly linked to postoperative medical complications.

## Abstract

Background: Although frailty has emerged as an important determinant of outcomes following cardiovascular surgery, the clinical significance of early postoperative physical frailty assessed during the acute recovery phase has not been investigated. Methods: We conducted a single-center retrospective observational study including patients who underwent cardiac or aortic surgery and completed a standardized physical function assessment within 10 days postoperatively. Physical frailty was defined using four objective indicators: Medical Research Council (MRC) sum score, gait speed, Timed Up and Go test, and five-times sit-to-stand test. Frailty was defined as the presence of ≥3 abnormal physical frailty indicators. Clinical outcomes included hospital length of stay (LOS) and postoperative medical complications. Negative binomial regression was used to evaluate factors associated with hospital LOS. Results: Among 441 patients included in the analysis, 308 (69.8%) were classified as frail. Frail patients were older and demonstrated significantly impaired physical performance across all frailty indicators (all p < 0.001). Frailty was associated with longer ICU stay and hospital LOS (both p < 0.001). In multivariable negative binomial regression, postoperative frailty was independently associated with prolonged hospital LOS (incidence rate ratio [IRR] 1.38, 95% CI 1.26–1.51; p < 0.001), after adjustment for age and timing of frailty assessment. Additional adjustment for surgical approach and surgical target did not improve model fit. Postoperative frailty was not significantly associated with the overall incidence of medical complications. Conclusions: Early postoperative physical frailty, assessed during the acute recovery phase, is independently associated with prolonged hospitalization after cardiac and aortic surgery. These findings suggest that early functional vulnerability captures clinically meaningful risk beyond surgical characteristics and may serve as a valuable target for postoperative risk stratification and rehabilitation planning.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Frail (MESH:D000073496), impaired (MESH:D060825)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13027658/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13027658