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Assessment of physical function of hospitalized older patients in routine clinical practice predicts 1-year mortality; A cohort study of 5,062 medical and surgical patients

Morten Tange Kristensen, Camilla Kampp Zilmer, Durita Viderø Gunnarsson, Theresa Bieler, Christian Hedelund Arens, Rasmus Gregersen Mottlau, Hanne Nygaard, Mette Aadahl, Charlotte Suetta, Christian Have Dall

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1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

METHODS: Adult patients referred for physical function evaluation by physio- or occupational therapists were evaluated with the Cumulated Ambulation Score (CAS) for basic mobility, 30sec-Sit-To-Stand-test (30s-STS) for muscle strength and function in lower extremities, and handgrip strength (HGS) as a proxy for general muscle strength. Results were categorized as normal (mean+/-1SD) or reduced (<-1SD) according to Danish sex- and age-decade reference values. The day of the first CAS assessment was used as an index for 1-year mortality in Cox regression analysis adjusted for age, sex, and multimorbidity (M3-index >1 point).

RESULTS: A total of 5062 unselected patients with a mean±SD age of 74.5±13.9 years (54% women), were evaluated with CAS in an acute (n = 337), surgical (n = 1671) or medical (n = 3054) ward. Of these, the 30s-STS was assessed in 85% (n = 4309) and HGS in 51% (n = 2580) patients, respectively. One-year mortality was 19.3%. The adjusted hazard ratio for 1-year mortality in patients with reduced CAS-mobility (57%), reduced 30s-STS (93%), and reduced HGS (44%) was 1.98 (95%CI, 1.71-2.29), 3.57 (2.21-5.78), and 2.06 (1.66-2.56), respectively, versus those with a normal physical function in respective tests. Correspondingly, hazard ratios for patients ≥85 years of age (n = 1185) were 2.02, 3.34 and 1.98.

CONCLUSIONS: In older medical and surgical hospitalised patients with reduced physical function (CAS, 30s-STS or HGS) 1-year mortality was markedly increased. This simple test battery is rapid and low-cost and can easily be implemented in other hospitals, acute care facilities, and across sectors.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEuropean Geriatric Medicine
ISSN1878-7649
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 2026

Bibliographical note

© 2026. The Author(s).

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