External validation of an index to predict up to 9-year mortality of community-dwelling adults aged 65 and older.

Schonberg, Mara A, Roger B Davis, Ellen P McCarthy, and Edward R Marcantonio. 2011. “External Validation of an Index to Predict up to 9-Year Mortality of Community-Dwelling Adults Aged 65 and Older.”. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 59 (8): 1444-51.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To further validate an index predicting mortality in community-dwelling older adults.

DESIGN: A comparison of the performance of the index in predicting mortality among new respondents to the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS, 2001-2004) with that of respondents from the original development and validation cohorts (1997-2000) and a test of its performance over extended follow-up (up to 9 years) using the original cohorts. Follow-up mortality data were available through 2006.

SETTING: NHIS.

PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-two thousand fifty-seven new respondents to the NHIS (2001-2004) and 24,139 respondents from the original development and validation cohorts (1997-2000).

MEASUREMENTS: A risk score was calculated for each respondent based on the presence or absence of 11 factors (function, illnesses, behaviors, demographics) that make up the index. Using the Kaplan-Meier method, 5-year mortality estimates were computed for the new and original cohort respondents and 9-year mortality estimates for the original cohorts.

RESULTS: New respondents were similar to original cohort respondents but were slightly more likely to be aged 85 and older, report diabetes mellitus, and have a body mass index of 25.0 kg/m² or greater. The model performed as well in the new cohort as it had in the original cohort. New respondents with risk scores of 0 to 1 had a 2% risk of 5-year mortality, whereas respondents who scored 18 or higher had a 69% risk of 5-year mortality (range 3-71% risk of 5-year mortality in the development cohort). The index also demonstrated excellent calibration and discrimination in predicting 9-year mortality (range 7% risk for scores of 0-1 to 92% risk for scores of ≥ 18, original validation cohort extended).

CONCLUSION: These results further justify use of this index to estimate life expectancy in clinical decision-making.

Last updated on 10/14/2023
PubMed