Archive/Daily Step Count Is Associated with Frailty Status in Veterans Presenting for Major Operations
Daily Step Count Is Associated with Frailty Status in Veterans Presenting for Major Operations
Jessica Y. Rove, Yi Su, Jennifer E. Stevens-Lapsley et al.
16. Juli 2026
en

Abstract

Background/Objectives: Frailty is an under-recognized preoperative risk factor for poor surgical outcomes. Recovery of preoperative ambulation levels one month after surgery represents an important patient-centered outcome. The purpose of this study was to (1) identify a preoperative daily step count threshold associated with frailty, and (2) characterize the one-month ambulation recovery (steps/day) of older adults (≥60 years) with and without frailty following major elective inpatient operations. Methods: This single-center observational pilot study included older adults undergoing elective inpatient operations at a Veterans Affairs Hospital. Frailty was assessed before surgery. Ambulation (steps/day) was measured continuously from ≥3 full days before surgery, to at least 28 days after surgery, using a wrist-worn accelerometer. Sensitivity analysis identified a step count threshold associated with frailty. The primary outcome was the percentage of daily steps recovered at 28 days. Results: The average age of participants (n = 109) was 69 years, and 37.6% (41/109) were identified as prefrail or frail. Preoperative steps/day were lower in the frail cohort (3322.00 [2654.70, 5483.20] versus 4993.95 [3540.90, 6599.97], p < 0.05). Sensitivity analysis showed 4137 steps/day to be associated with preoperative frailty, and this remained significant in multivariate analysis. At 28 days, the percentage of daily steps recovered did not differ between groups (72.57% [49.15, 92.06] overall). Conclusions: Preoperative frailty is associated with lower daily step counts (<4137 steps/day), identifying individuals at increased likelihood of frailty in this older Veteran cohort undergoing major surgery. The median daily step count, regardless of frailty status, was <5000 steps/day, consistent with a sedentary lifestyle, and likely too low to show a difference in one-month ambulation recovery. This finding underscores the need to explore walking interventions in older Veterans awaiting surgery.

IPC Classification

A61

Keywords

dailystepcountassociatedfrailtystatusveteranspresentingmajoroperationsgeriatricsbackgroundobjectivesunder-recognizedpreoperativeriskfactorpoorsurgicaloutcomesrecoveryambulationlevelsmonth
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