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Faster walking
speed aids survival in older Adults
Newswise,
January 5, 2011 — In an analysis that
included data from 9 studies, having higher
measures of walking speed among older adults
was associated with increased length of
survival, according to a study in the
January 5 issue of JAMA.
"Remaining years of life vary widely in
older adults, and physicians should consider
life expectancy when assessing goals of care
and treatment plans.
However, life
expectancy based on age and sex alone
provides limited information because
survival is also influenced by health and
functional abilities," according to
background information in the article.
There
are currently no well-established approaches
to predicting life expectancy that
incorporate health and function. Gait speed,
or walking speed, has been recommended as a
potentially useful clinical indicator of
well-being among older adults.
Stephanie Studenski, M.D., M.P.H., of the
University of Pittsburgh, and colleagues
conducted a study to assess the association
of gait speed with survival in older adults
and to determine the degree to which gait
speed explains variability in survival after
accounting for age and sex.
The study
included a pooled analysis of 9
participating studies (collected between
1986 and 2000), using individual data from
34,485 community-dwelling adults age 65
years or older with walking speed data
available at the beginning of the study,
followed up for 6 to 21 years.
Participants
had an average age of 73.5 years; 59.6
percent were women; and 79.8 percent were
white. Gait speed was calculated for each
participant using distance in meters and
time in seconds. All studies used
instructions to walk at usual pace and from
a standing start.
The walk distance varied
from 8 feet to 6 meters. The average gait
speed of the participants was 0.92 meters (3
feet) per second.
During the course of the study, there were
17,528 deaths. The overall 5-year survival
rate was 84.8 percent; the 10-year survival
rate was 59.7 percent. The researchers found
that gait speed was associated with
differences in the probability of survival
at all ages in both sexes, but was
especially informative after age 75 years.
At this age, predicted 10-year survival
across the range of gait speeds ranged from
19 percent to 87 percent in men and from 35
percent to 91 percent in women.
"Predicted years of remaining life for each
sex and age increased as gait speed
increased, with a gait speed of about 0.8
meters [2.6 feet]/second at the median
[midpoint] life expectancy at most ages for
both sexes.
Gait speeds of 1.0 meter [3.3
feet]/second or higher consistently
demonstrated survival that was longer than
expected by age and sex alone.
In this older
adult population the relationship of gait
speed with remaining years of life was
consistent across age groups, but the
absolute number of expected remaining years
of life was larger at younger ages," the
authors write.
The researchers also found that predicted
survival based on age, sex, and gait speed
was as accurate as predictions based on age,
sex, use of mobility aids, and self-reported
function or as age, sex, chronic conditions,
smoking history, blood pressure, body mass
index, and hospitalization.
The authors suggest there are several
reasons why gait speed may predict survival.
"Walking requires energy, movement control,
and support and places demands on multiple
organ systems, including the heart, lungs,
circulatory, nervous, and musculoskeletal
systems. Slowing gait may reflect both
damaged systems and a high energy cost of
walking."
The researchers write that there are a
number of ways gait speed might be used
clinically, including helping to identify
older adults with a high probability of
living for 5 or 10 more years, who may be
appropriate targets for preventive
interventions that require years for
benefit. Gait speed might be used to
identify older adults with increased risk of
early mortality, perhaps those with gait
speeds slower than 0.6 meter (2
feet)/second.
"In these patients, further
examination is targeted at potentially
modifiable risks to health and survival."
Also, gait speed might be monitored over
time, with a decline indicating a new health
problem that requires evaluation.
"The data provided herein are intended to
aid clinicians, investigators, and health
system planners who seek simple indicators
of health and survival in older adults. Gait
speed has potential to be implemented in
practice, using a stop watch and a 4-meter
[13 feet] course. From a standing start,
individuals are instructed to walk at their
usual pace, as if they were walking down the
street, and given no further encouragement
or instructions. The data in this article
can be used to help interpret the results.
Gait speed may be a simple and accessible
indicator of the health of the older
person," the authors conclude.
(JAMA. 2011;305[1]:50-58. Available
pre-embargo to the media at
www.jamamedia.org)
Editor's Note: Please see the article for
additional information, including other
authors, author contributions and
affiliations, financial disclosures, funding
and support, etc.
Editorial: Role of Gait Speed in the
Assessment of Older Patients
In an accompanying editorial, Matteo Cesari,
M.D., Ph.D., of the Universita Campus
Bio-Medico, Rome, writes that because no
evidence definitively supports the
hypothesis that gait speed improvements are
associated with better health-related
outcomes, gait speed should not be
considered as a primary target for
interventions at this time.
"It represents a global marker of health
status, and an optimal secondary and
complementary outcome to support research
findings, clinical decisions, or both aimed
at modifying more pragmatic end points. …
assessing gait speed in older persons is
likely to be a useful research tool and may
have a clinical role. Future research will
be needed to determine whether gait speed
has the potential to change the way in which
a patient is defined as geriatric."