Feasibility of the TARGET-EFT trial in frail and pre-frail cardiovascular inpatients
European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing

Abstract
Type of funding sources: None.
Older adults are at risk for hospital-acquired disability and deconditioning, often leading to the "post-hospitalization syndrome" of accelerated functional decline. We hypothesized that this syndrome could be prevented by a pragmatic multi-faceted intervention, and now report the initial experience and feasibility of our ongoing randomized clinical trial.
Patients admitted to the cardiovascular ward at a single academic center are screened with the Essential Frailty Toolset (EFT). Those ≥65 years with frailty (EFT: 3-5) or pre-frailty (EFT: 1-2) are eligible for the TARGET-EFT trial, in which they are randomly allocated to usual care or intervention. The intervention is targeted such that patients with physical weakness receive supervised exercise sessions (in addition to clinically-indicated physiotherapy), those with cognitive impairment receive stimulation activities, those with iron deficiency anemia receive intravenous iron sucrose, and those with malnutrition-related hypoalbuminemia receive protein supplements. The outcome is a composite score representing mobility, disability, activity, discomfort, and mood (EQ-5D-5L) ascertained by a blinded observer on the day of discharge and at 30 days post-hospitalization.
To date, 77 out of a planned 144 patients have been randomized. The most common reasons for exclusion are age <65 years, expected discharge within <3 days and patient refusal. The median age is 80 years and length of stay is 8 days. In each group, 1 patient withdrew and 1 died. There were no intervention-related adverse events. Of the 39 intervention patients, 36 qualified for exercise and received an average of 6 sessions (46% of sessions were deferred because patients were away for tests, were bedrest post-procedures, or refused), 18 received cognitive stimulation, 15 received intravenous iron sucrose, and 16 received protein supplements.
The TARGET-EFT intervention is feasible and appears safe for frail and pre-frail patients hospitalized with acute cardiovascular disease. Given that nursing staff, physiotherapists, nutritionists and clinicians already address basic cognitive orientation, mobilization and nutritional/iron supplementation needs, it appears that adding targeted interventions for patients’ specific frailty deficits is feasible when shared amongst allied health professionals.
Abstract Figure. TARGET-EFT Trial Flow Chart
Contributors

F Ahmad
Author

R Fountotos
Author

H Munir
Author

S Lantagne
Author

K Hagerty
Author

MM Hedzazi
Author

F Volynsky
Author

J Marsala
Author

M Goldfarb
Author

J Afilalo
Author
