Подробно ръководство скоро
Работим върху подробно образователно ръководство за Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS). Проверете отново скоро за обяснения стъпка по стъпка, формули, примери от реалния живот и експертни съвети.
The Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS), developed by Kenneth Rockwood and colleagues at Dalhousie University and published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal in 2005, is a validated 9-point ordinal scale for assessing and communicating the degree of frailty in older adults based on clinical judgement of functional status, activity level, and dependence on assistance. Frailty is a state of increased vulnerability to physiological stressors resulting from reduced physiological reserve across multiple organ systems, and it is distinct from chronological age — two 80-year-olds may have vastly different CFS scores. The scale ranges from 1 (very fit — robust, active, and full of energy) to 9 (terminally ill — approaching end of life with life expectancy less than 6 months, not expected to recover from current illness). Intermediate categories describe progressively increasing levels of vulnerability and functional dependence: CFS 2 (well — without active disease but less fit than CFS 1), CFS 3 (managing well — medical problems are well controlled but not regularly active beyond routine walking), CFS 4 (vulnerable — not dependent on others but symptoms limit activities and 'slows down' on bad days), CFS 5 (mildly frail — often slow and may have difficulty with instrumental activities of daily living), CFS 6 (moderately frail — help needed with all outdoor activities and in-home), CFS 7 (severely frail — completely dependent for personal care), CFS 8 (very severely frail — completely dependent and approaching end of life), and CFS 9 (terminally ill). A CFS score of 5 or above is consistently associated with adverse clinical outcomes including higher inpatient mortality, ICU complications, prolonged hospital stay, increased 30-day readmission, and frailty-related functional decline. The CFS was adopted widely during the COVID-19 pandemic as a key tool for critical care triage and prioritisation decisions.
CFS 1=Very Fit; 2=Well; 3=Managing Well; 4=Vulnerable; 5=Mildly Frail; 6=Moderately Frail; 7=Severely Frail; 8=Very Severely Frail; 9=Terminally Ill; CFS ≥5 = frailty predicts adverse outcomes
- 1Step 1 — Assess functional activity: Determine patient's activity level, exercise habits, and how active they are relative to their peers. Vigorous exercise = CFS 1; regular walking = CFS 2–3.
- 2Step 2 — Identify disease control and symptoms: Well-controlled chronic disease with preserved function = CFS 3; symptoms limiting activity ('slows down on bad days') = CFS 4.
- 3Step 3 — Assess instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs): Shopping, cooking, housework, transport, medication management, finances. Difficulty with IADLs without help for personal care = CFS 5.
- 4Step 4 — Assess personal activities of daily living (PADLs): Bathing, dressing, toileting, continence, transferring, feeding. Any dependence on personal care = CFS 6–7.
- 5Step 5 — Assess degree of dependence: Needs help with all outdoor activities = CFS 6; completely dependent on others for personal care = CFS 7.
- 6Step 6 — Assess end-of-life indicators: Approaching end of life, not expected to recover from acute illness = CFS 8; certified terminal illness with life expectancy <6 months = CFS 9.
- 7Step 7 — Use baseline CFS (pre-illness): In hospitalised patients, assess CFS based on their status in the 2 weeks BEFORE the acute illness, not their current state during admission. This pre-hospital baseline reflects true frailty rather than acute decompensation.
Not frail despite age; appropriate for major surgery without frailty-specific precautions
Regular exercise + fully independent ADLs + no functional limitations = CFS 2. Age alone does not determine CFS. This patient can tolerate physiological stress well.
High perioperative risk; fraility-aware anaesthesia; geriatric input; delirium prevention; early rehabilitation
Help needed with personal care + housebound = CFS 6. Moderately frail. Hip fracture mortality and complications significantly elevated compared to non-frail patients at the same age.
CFS ≥5 associated with higher ICU mortality; goals of care discussion recommended; consider ceiling of treatment
Pre-hospital: slow with frame (mobility limited) + needs meal assistance (IADL limited) = CFS 5–6. Frailty is a strong independent predictor of ICU non-survival. Family/proxy discussion about escalation limits is essential.
Major surgery would be futile; palliative approach is appropriate; advance care plan discussion
Complete dependence for personal care + bedbound + no meaningful communication = CFS 7–8. Treatment decisions should focus on comfort rather than life-extending interventions.
Mortgage lenders and loan officers use Frailty Scale to structure repayment schedules, compare fixed versus adjustable rate options, and calculate total borrowing costs for residential and commercial real estate transactions across different term lengths.
Personal finance advisors apply Frailty Scale when counseling clients on debt reduction strategies, comparing the mathematical benefit of accelerated payments against alternative investment returns to determine the optimal allocation of surplus cash flow.
Credit unions and community banks rely on Frailty Scale to generate accurate Truth in Lending disclosures, ensure regulatory compliance with TILA and RESPA requirements, and provide borrowers with standardized cost comparisons across competing loan products.
Corporate treasury departments use Frailty Scale to model the cost of revolving credit facilities, term loans, and commercial paper programs, optimizing the company's capital structure and minimizing weighted average cost of debt financing.
Zero or negative interest rate
In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in frailty scale calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.
Balloon payment at maturity
In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in frailty scale calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.
Variable rate mid-term adjustment
In practice, this edge case requires careful consideration because standard assumptions may not hold. When encountering this scenario in frailty scale calculations, practitioners should verify boundary conditions, check for division-by-zero risks, and consider whether the model's assumptions remain valid under these extreme conditions.
Frailty and Goals of Care
CFS assessment should not be used in isolation to withdraw or withhold treatment. CFS ≥7 indicates high risk but some severely frail patients with acute reversible illness (e.g., sepsis from UTI) will survive and return to their previous level of function. Goals of care conversations must be individualised, patient and family-centred, and consider reversibility of the acute insult alongside baseline frailty.
| CFS | Category | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Very Fit | Robust, active, energetic; exercises regularly; among the fittest for their age |
| 2 | Well | No active disease symptoms; less fit than CFS 1; exercises occasionally |
| 3 | Managing Well | Medical problems well controlled; not regularly active beyond routine walking |
| 4 | Vulnerable | Not dependent on others; slows down and tires on bad days; symptoms limit activity |
| 5 | Mildly Frail | Slow; needs help with heavy housework, shopping, finances, medication — but not personal care |
| 6 | Moderately Frail | Needs help with all outdoor activities and in-house activities; some difficulty with stairs |
| 7 | Severely Frail | Completely dependent for personal care (bathing, dressing, toileting) |
| 8 | Very Severely Frail | Completely dependent; approaching end of life; not recovering from illness |
| 9 | Terminally Ill | Life expectancy <6 months; otherwise not evidently frail |
How does CFS differ from physical frailty phenotype (Fried criteria)?
The Fried Frailty Phenotype uses five measurable criteria (unintentional weight loss, exhaustion, weakness/grip strength, slowness, low physical activity) and classifies patients as pre-frail (1–2 criteria) or frail (3–5 criteria). The CFS is a clinical judgement-based ordinal scale that assesses overall functional status and independence rather than specific physical measurements. CFS is faster to apply clinically and correlates well with frailty phenotype in most populations.
Should CFS reflect current admission status or pre-illness baseline?
CFS should ALWAYS reflect the patient's pre-illness baseline — their functional status in the 2 weeks BEFORE the acute presentation. A patient admitted acutely ill with limited mobility due to pain, infection, or encephalopathy has a temporarily depressed CFS. Using the acute state instead of baseline overestimates frailty and may lead to inappropriate treatment limitation. Always ask about function before the illness.
At what CFS score is frailty considered clinically significant?
CFS 5 or above (mildly frail) consistently predicts adverse outcomes across multiple settings: higher surgical mortality, increased ICU complications, prolonged hospital stay, higher 30-day readmission, and functional decline. CFS 7–8 is associated with very high mortality from any acute illness. CFS 4 (vulnerable) carries intermediate risk and warrants monitoring during acute illness.
Is CFS validated for perioperative risk assessment?
Yes — multiple systematic reviews confirm CFS as an independent predictor of postoperative mortality, complications, and failure to return home after elective and emergency surgery. The Royal College of Surgeons of England recommends CFS assessment as part of preoperative frailty screening. CFS ≥5 should trigger comprehensive geriatric assessment and prehabilitation before elective surgery.
What is a comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA)?
CGA is a multidimensional, multidisciplinary assessment covering: medical conditions and medications; nutritional status; cognitive function (MoCA, MMSE); mood (GDS, PHQ-9); function (Barthel ADL Index); mobility and falls risk; social circumstances and carer support; and goals of care. CGA identifies reversible frailty contributors and guides individualised interventions to optimise function before and after acute illness or surgery.
How was CFS used during COVID-19?
During the COVID-19 pandemic, CFS was widely adopted (and controversially in some contexts) as a component of critical care triage frameworks to guide ventilator allocation decisions during resource constraints. CFS ≥7 was used in some UK frameworks to indicate that mechanical ventilation was unlikely to result in meaningful survival. This highlighted important ethical questions about using frailty scores for treatment limitation without comprehensive individual assessment.
Can CFS be assessed from medical records or informant history?
Yes — CFS can be reliably assessed from retrospective review of medical records, GP letter, nursing home notes, or history provided by a family member or carer who knows the patient well. Studies show good inter-rater reliability when assessors have access to functional history. In obtunded or critically ill patients, proxy informant assessment (family or carer) of pre-illness function is essential.
Is frailty reversible with intervention?
Pre-frailty and mild frailty (CFS 3–5) may be partially reversible with targeted interventions: resistance exercise and physiotherapy, nutritional supplementation (protein intake optimisation), medication review and deprescribing, management of chronic pain and depression. Prehabilitation (exercise and nutrition before elective surgery) improves outcomes in frail patients. Severe frailty (CFS 7–8) is generally not reversible but management can optimise quality of life and prevent further decline.
Pro Tip
Use the 'two-week rule': always ask about the patient's function in the two weeks BEFORE the current acute illness, not how they are during admission. Ask family, carers, or GP. Key questions: 'Before this illness, could they walk outside independently? Did they need help with bathing or dressing? Were they housebound?' These questions map directly onto CFS 4, 6, and 6 respectively.
Did you know?
Kenneth Rockwood originally developed the Clinical Frailty Scale from analysis of the Canadian Study of Health and Aging — one of the largest longitudinal studies of aging ever conducted, following over 10,000 Canadians from 1991 onward. The simple 7-point (later 9-point) scale he derived from this massive dataset has now been cited over 3,000 times and is used in ICUs, surgical units, emergency departments, and care homes across six continents. Few clinical tools have been so universally adopted so rapidly.
References
- ›Rockwood K et al. — A Global Clinical Measure of Fitness and Frailty (CMAJ 2005)
- ›Darvall JN et al. — Clinical Frailty Scale for Perioperative Risk — Systematic Review (Anaesthesia 2021)
- ›NICE — Older People in Hospital, NG56 (2017)
- ›RCP — Frailty: Developing Best Practice 2023
- ›LITFL Clinical Frailty Scale Reference