The Italian population is progressively aging, and cancer incidence increases with age. Older patients are at higher risk of frailty, a condition associated with adverse outcomes such as disability, falls, hospitalization, and mortality. Key indicators of frailty include reduced balance, impaired physical activity, cognitive decline, and particularly sarcopenia, defined as the progressive loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength. After age 60, muscle mass decreases by 1.4-2.5% annually, while muscle strength declines by 15% between ages 60-70 and by up to 30% per decade thereafter. Sarcopenia increases the risk of falls, fractures, hospitalization, and non-cancer-related death. In cancer patients, its prevalence ranges from 11% to 74% and is associated with poorer survival outcomes in both early and advanced disease stages.In clinical oncology practice, several tools are available to assess frailty, identify vulnerable patients, and personalize care, treatment, and supportive interventions.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
160
Evaluation of the frailty impact on the toxicity grade 3-4 in patients undergoing chemotherapy treatment.
Trial Office-ASST Ovest Milanese
Legnano, Italy, Italy
Impact of frailty on grade 3-4 Chemotherapy Toxicity in Patients with Solid and Hematologic Malignancies.
Evaluation of the impact of frailty on the probability of grade 3 or 4 toxicity in patients with solid or hematologic malignancies undergoing chemotherapy treatment. Multidimensional geriatric assessment including: G8 (0-17): ≤14 = frail/vulnerable; \>14 = normal. IADL (0-8): higher scores indicate greater independence. CCI: 0-2 = low comorbidity; ≥3 = high comorbidity burden. SPPB (0-12): 10-12 = good, 7-9 = intermediate, ≤6 = poor physical performance. MUST: 0 = low, 1 = medium, ≥2 = high risk of malnutrition. Mini-Cog (0-5): ≥3 = normal cognition; \<3 = cognitive impairment. CARG: low, intermediate, or high risk of severe chemotherapy toxicity. MNA: ≥24 = normal; 17-23.5 = at risk of malnutrition; \<17 = malnourished. Laboratory tests: routine pre-chemotherapy assessments according to institutional standards. BIA: evaluation of body composition, muscle mass, and phase angle. CT/MRI: assessment of muscle area at L3/L4; sarcopenia defined as \<4.8 cm²/m² in women and \<6.6 cm²/m² in men
Time frame: 12 months from screening
Identification of Sarcopenia and Frailty through Clinical Assessment
Agreement between CT/MRI and BIA for sarcopenia diagnosis and association with geriatric and laboratory parameters. G8 (0-17): ≤14 = frail/vulnerable; \>14 = normal. IADL (0-8): higher scores indicate greater independence. CCI: 0-2 = low comorbidity; ≥3 = high comorbidity burden. SPPB (0-12): 10-12 = good, 7-9 = intermediate, ≤6 = poor physical performance. MUST: 0 = low, 1 = medium, ≥2 = high risk of malnutrition. Mini-Cog (0-5): ≥3 = normal cognition; \<3 = cognitive impairment. CARG: low, intermediate, or high risk of severe chemotherapy toxicity. MNA: ≥24 = normal; 17-23.5 = at risk of malnutrition; \<17 = malnourished. Laboratory tests: routine pre-chemotherapy assessments according to institutional standards. BIA: evaluation of body composition, muscle mass, and phase angle. CT/MRI: assessment of muscle area at L3/L4; sarcopenia defined as \<4.8 cm²/m² in women and \<6.6 cm²/m² in men.
Time frame: 12 months from the screening
Correlation of Radiological, Functional, Clinical, and Laboratory Assessments in the Diagnosis of Sarcopenia and Frailty
Evaluation of the concordance between sarcopenia diagnosed through radiological imaging (CT/MRI) and that obtained through a functional assessment (bioelectrical impedance analysis), the correlation between instrumental assessments and clinical parameters (comprehensive geriatric assessment) for the diagnosis of sarcopenia/frailty, and the correlation between laboratory values and clinical-instrumental measures.
Time frame: 12 months from screening
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