Background: Frailty is a geriatric syndrome of reduced physiologic reserve that increases surgical risk and is common among older adults undergoing hip or knee replacement. While prehabilitation has shown promise in enhancing outcomes, evidence from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in frail orthopedic patients is limited. Objective: This study aims to evaluate the feasibility and preliminary data on the effectiveness of a multimodal prehabilitation program for frail patients undergoing elective hip or knee arthroplasty. Methods: A pilot RCT will be conducted at Landspítali-University Hospital. Patients ≥70 years scheduled for surgery with ≥2 months waiting time will be screened for frailty using PRISMA-7, the Clock Drawing Test, and Timed Up \& Go. Patients screening positive for any of the three screening tools will be randomized to multimodal prehabilitation or standard of care. The intervention includes comprehensive geriatric assessment, medication review, tailored physiotherapy using the Otago Exercise Programme, and nutritional counseling if at risk of malnutrition. We will conduct an external pilot for feasibility measures (overall enrollment, recruitment, retention, adherence). Secondary outcomes include physical performance, postoperative complications, patient-reported health status (WOMAC scale) and quality of life (EQ-5D-5L ), length of primary hospital stay, discharge location, falls postoperatively, 180-day readmission and 180-day mortality. Significance: This trial may aid in the design of larger RCT study and provide a signal of the role of multimodal prehabilitation on outcomes, including quality of life and health status among frail arthroplasty patients.
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Recruitment rate
Timeframe: During the inclusion time period, from enrollment of the first patient to the enrollment of the last patient or up to one year from the start of the study.
Retention rate
Timeframe: The study period, from the randomization to 180-day follow-up
Overall enrollment yield
Timeframe: During the inclusion time period, from enrollment of the first patient to the enrollment of the last patient or up to one year from the start of the study.
Exercise adherence
Timeframe: Throughout the prehabilitation period, which is from enrollment to surgery (2-8 months)