Physical, Psychological, Cognitive and Social Frailty Domains in Community-Dwelling Adults Aged 45–85: a Cross-sectional Analysis of the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA)

Authors

  • Lauren E. Griffith McMaster University
  • Graciela Muniz Terrera Ohio University
  • Edwin van den Heuvel Eindhoven University of Technology
  • Jayati Khattar University of Toronto
  • David B. Hogan University of Calgary
  • Megan O’Connell University of Saskatchewan
  • Mélanie Levasseur Université de Sherbrooke
  • Parminder Raina McMaster University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5770/cgj.28.872

Keywords:

frailty domains, physical frailty, psychological frailty, social frailty, cognitive frailty

Abstract

Background

Reported estimates of frailty prevalence vary considerably. At least partially attributable to differences in the conceptualization of frailty used, a better understanding of the interre-lationships among frailty domains could clarify contributors to the noted heterogeneity.

Methods

A global frailty index (FI) created from baseline data on 30,097 Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging comprehensive cohort participants was used to define physical, psychological, cognitive, and social domain-specific FIs. These were divided into quintiles with the highest 20% (Q5) representing the frailest participants. Logistic regression was used to estimate the associations between age group and biological sex with domain-specific FIs in unadjusted and adjusted (income, smoking status, nutritional risk, physical activity, social participation, interaction between sex and age group) models. The association between Q5 membership among the frailty domains was estimated using polychoric correlation coefficients.

Results

The prevalence of physical and cognitive frailty increased with age, but psychological frailty decreased, especially in males. Social frailty showed gradual increases with age in females that were only evident in the oldest age group (75–85) among men. The age-groups*sex interaction p value was p<.001 for social. Polychoric correlations were highest between the psychological/physical and psychological/social domains, and decreased with increasing age for all combinations.

Conclusion

We found that domain-specific frailty prevalences differed by age group and sex with low associations among frailty domains, particularly at older ages. Understanding the evolution of these findings could be instrumental in developing tailored interventions to prevent frailty or modify its trajectory.

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Published

2025-12-03

How to Cite

1.
Griffith LE, Muniz Terrera G, van den Heuvel E, Khattar J, Hogan DB, O’Connell M, Levasseur M, Raina P. Physical, Psychological, Cognitive and Social Frailty Domains in Community-Dwelling Adults Aged 45–85: a Cross-sectional Analysis of the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA). Can Geriatr J [Internet]. 2025 Dec. 3 [cited 2026 Apr. 25];28(4):343-52. Available from: https://cgjonline.ca/index.php/cgj/article/view/872

Issue

Section

Original Research