PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study reveals clinical frailty scale as a quick predictor of patient risk after heart failure administration

Researchers find that the Clinical Frailty Scale predicts 2-year mortality after heart failure hospitalization

2025-10-28
(Press-News.org)

Frailty is closely linked to adverse outcomes in older adults, particularly those with heart failure. Numerous epidemiologic studies show that frailty has important prognostic value in this population, underscoring the need for routine assessment. At the same time, the concept of frailty has expanded beyond the physical domain to include cognitive and other dimensions, making comprehensive evaluation increasingly complex and less feasible in everyday practice. The Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS) offers a practical alternative: a 9-point, bedside, visually assessed tool that can be completed in minutes. However, key questions remain—how closely this impression-based score reflects objective measures of physical and cognitive function, and whether CFS independently predicts mortality among patients hospitalized with heart failure.

 

Against this backdrop, the potential predictive value of CFS was studied by a research team led by Dr. Taisuke Nakade from the Department of Cardiovascular Biology and Medicine, Juntendo University Graduate School of Medicine, Japan, along with Dr. Yuya Matsue, also from the same university. The team involved collaborators from other institutions in Japan and the United States. Their findings were published online in The Journal of the American College of Cardiology on October 15, 2025.

 

Describing the motivation for this research, Dr. Nakade notes that, “Although conventional assessments—such as grip strength, gait speed, chair stand, the short physical performance battery, and the 6-minute walk test—have well-established prognostic value, they often require specialized equipment, time, and trained personnel, limiting their use in practical settings. Conversely, the CFS offers a rapid, visually assessed, bedside evaluation that requires no equipment or specialized training.” If the predictive value of CFS for patients with heart failure is confirmed, it would help doctors to quickly identify which patients would need additional support and monitoring after discharge.

 

The researchers looked at anonymized patient information from the Japanese Registry of Acute Decompensated Heart Failure–Next (JROADHF-NEXT). This dataset drew from 87 hospitals across Japan, covered 3,905 patients. It included details of CFS scores, physical endurance data, cognitive performance scores, and patient follow-up for at least 2 years after being treated for heart failure.

 

Dr. Nakade and team found that, at discharge, the majority of patients had CFS scores of 4 or higher, indicating that most patients with heart failure were of pre-frail status or worse. More importantly, the 2-year mortality rate rose by 1.42 times for each additional point of a patient’s CFS score. This meant that the risk of death within 2 years of treatment for a patient with heart failure having CFS greater than 7 was 6.59 times greater than that of someone with CFS of 2 or less.

 

Regarding other tests of physical and cognitive performance, the team found that there were moderate to strong correlations with CFS scores. “These associations remained significant and consistent after adjustment for age, sex, and additional clinical covariates, demonstrating that higher CFS scores were independently linked to both physical and cognitive impairment,” says Dr. Nakade.

 

The team evaluated how well different models predicted 2-year all-cause mortality. Adding objective physical and cognitive test scores to a biomarker-based baseline model improved discrimination. Replacing those objective tests with the CFS score further enhanced performance, indicating that CFS provides robust, incremental prognostic value for risk assessment after heart failure hospitalization.

 

The implications of these findings are profound. CFS can be used to identify high-risk patients right from the point of admission, allowing doctors to prioritize them and provide tailored treatment that is well within the patient’s tolerance. Similarly, extended care, rehabilitation, post-discharge monitoring, and quality tracking can also be modified to meet the patient’s frailty status.

 

As Dr. Nakade concludes, “Ultimately, embedding CFS into routine workflows may help bridge the gap between prognostic insight and tangible improvements in patient outcomes.”

 

Reference

Authors

Taisuke Nakadea, Yudai Fujimotoa, Yu Suresvar Singha, Yuka Akamaa, Tomomi Ideb,c, Keisuke Kidad, Shouji Matsushimab,c, Hidetaka Kakub,c,e , Nobuyuki Enzanb,c,f,g, Masataka Ikedab,c,h, Takeshi Kitaii, Tatsunori Taniguchij, Takahiro Okumurak,l Takeshi Tohyamab,c,g,m,n, Hiroyuki Tsutsuib,c,g, and Yuya Matsuea

Title of original paper

Frailty Scale Captures Multidimensional Vulnerability and Predicts Mortality in Heart Failure

Journal

The Journal of the American College of Cardiology

DOI

10.1016/j.jacc.2025.09.1590

Affiliations

aDepartment of Cardiovascular Biology and Medicine, Juntendo University Graduate School of Medicine

bDepartment of Cardiovascular Medicine, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Kyushu University

cDivision of Cardiovascular Medicine, Research Institute of Angiocardiology, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Kyushu University

dDepartment of Pharmacology, St. Marianna University School of Medicine

eDepartment of Cardiology, Japan Community Healthcare Organization Kyushu Hospital

fCardiovascular Disease Initiative, Broad Institute

gInternational University of Health and Welfare

hDepartment of Cardiovascular Medicine, Kyushu University Beppu Hospital

iDepartment of Cardiovascular Medicine, National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Center

jDepartment of Cardiovascular Medicine, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine

kDepartment of Cardiology, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine

lDepartment of Advanced Cardiovascular Therapeutics, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine

mCenter for Clinical and Translational Research, Kyushu University Hospital

nInstitute for Medical Engineering and Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

About Dr. Taisuke Nakade from Juntendo University, Japan

Dr. Taisuke Nakade is a Doctor of Medicine in the Department of Cardiovascular Biology and Medicine at the Juntendo University Graduate School of Medicine. His research covers a wide range of topics in cardiology and sports medicine, including heart failure and exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation. Dr. Nakade has published over 20 articles in this field and is a member of prestigious research societies, such as the Heart Failure Association (HFA) of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC).

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Game-changing heat shield to revolutionize aerospace manufacturing with long-life engines

2025-10-28
Aerospace industry has undergone tremendous developments over the last century, with materials science engineers playing a significant role in this transformation. It is well known that as the operating temperature of metallic materials increases, the speed of aircraft can be enhanced and fuel consumption can be reduced. Therefore, research on high-temperature materials has been directly linked to the improvement of aircraft performance and has been actively conducted worldwide since the 1940s. For more than 80 years, Ni-based alloys have been the primary materials used for high-temperature applications. To enable their use at even higher temperatures, ...

Pusan National University researchers show how AI can help in fashion trend prediction

2025-10-28
Fashion trend forecasting helps companies predict which clothes will be popular in upcoming seasons. Traditionally, this has relied on experts’ intuition, experience and creativity. More recently, big-data analysis has been incorporated, offering deeper insights into consumer behavior. However, such methods pose technical barriers and remain out of reach for fashion students or small brands. Recent developments in artificial intelligence (AI) can balance the scales. Large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT have made big data analysis readily available to the public.  LLMs draw ...

Sinking Indian megacities pose 'alarming' building damage risks

2025-10-28
Sinking land is quietly destabilizing urban infrastructure in India’s largest cities, putting thousands of buildings and millions of people at risk, according to Virginia Tech scientists. Groundwater overuse is a critical driver of the problem, said Susanna Werth, assistant professor of geosciences who co-authored the paper published Oct. 28 in Nature Sustainability. “When cities pump more water from aquifers than nature can replenish, the ground quite literally sinks,” Werth said. “Our study shows that this overexploitation ...

Cul-de-sac effect: Why Mediterranean regions are becoming more prone to extreme floods in a changing climate

2025-10-28
Key Messages In May 2023, devastating floods hit Emilia-Romagna, causing deaths, displacement, and estimated damages of €8.5 billion. Cul-de-sac effect: The CMCC research team described for the first time how a specific configuration of mountain topography and circulation patterns trapped moisture coming from the Adriatic, while a stationary cyclone fueled prolonged rains that lasted for several days over the same area, leading to extreme flooding. From the analysis of the Emilia-Romagna case, the ...

Now in 3D, maps begin to bring exoplanets into focus

2025-10-28
ITHACA, N.Y. – Astronomers have generated the first three-dimensional map of a planet orbiting another star, revealing an atmosphere with distinct temperature zones – one so scorching that it breaks down water vapor, a team co-led by a Cornell expert reports in new research. The temperature map of WASP-18b – a gas giant known as an “ultra-hot Jupiter,” located 400 light years from Earth – is the first applying a technique called 3D eclipse mapping, or spectroscopic eclipse mapping. The effort builds on a 2D model that members of the same team published in 2023, which demonstrated eclipse mapping’s potential ...

Researchers develop an ultrasound probe capable of imaging an entire organ in 4D

2025-10-28
For the first time, a team of Inserm researchers from the Physics for Medicine Institute (Inserm/ESPCI Paris-PSL/CNRS) has succeeded in mapping the blood flow of an entire organ in animals (heart, kidney and liver) with great precision, in four dimensions: 3D + time. This new imaging technique, when applied to humans, could both improve our understanding of the circulatory system (veins, arteries, vessels and lymphatic system) and facilitate the diagnosis of certain blood circulation-related diseases. These results are published ...

Oxygen deprivation heightens risk of illness by changing genes

2025-10-28
Low oxygen levels in the blood can alter the genetic makeup of key immune cells, weakening the body’s ability to fight infection, new research shows.  Scientists found that oxygen deprivation – known as hypoxia – changes the genetic material of immune cells called neutrophils, reducing their capacity to destroy harmful microbes.  The team discovered that low oxygen appears to leave a lasting mark on the bone marrow cells that produce neutrophils, meaning the impact can persist after oxygen ...

Missing nutrient in breast milk may explain health challenges in children of women with HIV

2025-10-28
A new UCLA study reveals that breast milk from women living with HIV contains significantly lower levels of tryptophan, an essential amino acid likely important for infant immune function, growth, and brain development. This discovery may help explain why children born to women living with HIV experience higher rates of illness and developmental challenges, even when the children themselves are not infected with the virus. The study appears in Nature Communications. Why it matters Approximately 1.3 million children are born to women living with HIV annually worldwide. Even with effective antiretroviral therapy that prevents HIV transmission, these children who ...

Custom-designed receptors boost cancer-fighting T cells

2025-10-28
Cancer immunotherapy, especially using T cells, is showing a lot of promise in treating blood cancers. Bioengineered T cells, especially those equipped with chimeric antigen receptors (CAR-T cells), have revolutionized cancer treatment. But while they’ve delivered impressive results against certain blood cancers, they’ve struggled to make an impact in solid tumors, such as those in the breast, lung, and prostate. The tumor microenvironment is the problem A major problem is the tumor microenvironment (TME), which is a mix of cells and molecules ...

Polar bears act as crucial providers for Arctic species

2025-10-28
Photos: here SAN DIEGO (Oct. 28, 2025) – A new study published in the scientific journal Oikos reveals for the first time the critical role polar bears play as carrion providers for Arctic species. Researchers from University of Manitoba and San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance, alongside researchers from Environment and Climate Change Canada, and the University of Alberta, have estimated that polar bears leave behind approximately 7.6 million kilograms of their prey annually, creating a massive and vital food source for a wide network of arctic scavenger ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New open-source American College of Lifestyle Medicine program brings culinary skills and nutrition education into medicine

AI tool identifies women at high risk of interval breast cancer

USF study: AI and citizen science reveal potential first detection of invasive malaria mosquito in Madagascar

American Pediatric Society honors Dr. Bruce D. Gelb with 2026 APS John Howland Award

Leveraging COVID-19 lessons to prepare for the next pandemic

Mount Sinai awarded $4.5M BD2 grant to advance research on the biology of bipolar disorder

Global initiative to demonstrate operational excellence in Nigeria for metastatic colorectal cancer patients

AI produces shallower knowledge than web search

New study shows global decline in parental trust in childhood vaccines after COVID-19, contributing to increased measles outbreaks

BD² awards $18 million in grants to advance research on the biology of bipolar disorder

Opt-out organ donation policies might reduce organ supply

Message from the oldest-living dogs to dogs and men: Gonad function fights frailty

Distinct brain features in football players may tell who is at risk of long-term traumatic disease

Identifying safer implant designs for total hip replacement

Study reveals clinical frailty scale as a quick predictor of patient risk after heart failure administration

Game-changing heat shield to revolutionize aerospace manufacturing with long-life engines

Pusan National University researchers show how AI can help in fashion trend prediction

Sinking Indian megacities pose 'alarming' building damage risks

Cul-de-sac effect: Why Mediterranean regions are becoming more prone to extreme floods in a changing climate

Now in 3D, maps begin to bring exoplanets into focus

Researchers develop an ultrasound probe capable of imaging an entire organ in 4D

Oxygen deprivation heightens risk of illness by changing genes

Missing nutrient in breast milk may explain health challenges in children of women with HIV

Custom-designed receptors boost cancer-fighting T cells

Polar bears act as crucial providers for Arctic species

Body clocks matter for heart health

Crystal-free mechanoluminescence illuminates new possibilities for next-generation materials

Scientists develop an efficient method of producing proteins from E. coli

AAAS announces addition of Cancer Communications to Science Partner Journal Program

Systematic review reveals psilocybin reduces obsessive-compulsive behaviors across clinical and preclinical evidence

[Press-News.org] Study reveals clinical frailty scale as a quick predictor of patient risk after heart failure administration
Researchers find that the Clinical Frailty Scale predicts 2-year mortality after heart failure hospitalization