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Featured researches published by Tung-Wai Auyeung.


Journal of the American Medical Directors Association | 2014

Sarcopenia in Asia: Consensus Report of the Asian Working Group for Sarcopenia

Liang-Kung Chen; Li-Kuo Liu; Jean Woo; Prasert Assantachai; Tung-Wai Auyeung; Kamaruzzaman Shahrul Bahyah; Ming-Yueh Chou; Liang-Yu Chen; Pi-Shan Hsu; Orapitchaya Krairit; Jenny Lee; Wei-Ju Lee; Yunhwan Lee; Chih-Kuang Liang; Panita Limpawattana; Chu-Sheng Lin; Li-Ning Peng; Shosuke Satake; Takao Suzuki; Chang Won Won; Chih-Hsing Wu; Si-Nan Wu; Teimei Zhang; Ping Zeng; Masahiro Akishita; Hidenori Arai

Sarcopenia, a newly recognized geriatric syndrome, is characterized by age-related decline of skeletal muscle plus low muscle strength and/or physical performance. Previous studies have confirmed the association of sarcopenia and adverse health outcomes, such as falls, disability, hospital admission, long term care placement, poorer quality of life, and mortality, which denotes the importance of sarcopenia in the health care for older people. Despite the clinical significance of sarcopenia, the operational definition of sarcopenia and standardized intervention programs are still lacking. It is generally agreed by the different working groups for sarcopenia in the world that sarcopenia should be defined through a combined approach of muscle mass and muscle quality, however, selecting appropriate diagnostic cutoff values for all the measurements in Asian populations is challenging. Asia is a rapidly aging region with a huge population, so the impact of sarcopenia to this region is estimated to be huge as well. Asian Working Group for Sarcopenia (AWGS) aimed to promote sarcopenia research in Asia, and we collected the best available evidences of sarcopenia researches from Asian countries to establish the consensus for sarcopenia diagnosis. AWGS has agreed with the previous reports that sarcopenia should be described as low muscle mass plus low muscle strength and/or low physical performance, and we also recommend outcome indicators for further researches, as well as the conditions that sarcopenia should be assessed. In addition to sarcopenia screening for community-dwelling older people, AWGS recommends sarcopenia assessment in certain clinical conditions and healthcare settings to facilitate implementing sarcopenia in clinical practice. Moreover, we also recommend cutoff values for muscle mass measurements (7.0 kg/m(2) for men and 5.4 kg/m(2) for women by using dual X-ray absorptiometry, and 7.0 kg/m(2) for men and 5.7 kg/m(2) for women by using bioimpedance analysis), handgrip strength (<26 kg for men and <18 kg for women), and usual gait speed (<0.8 m/s). However, a number of challenges remained to be solved in the future. Asia is made up of a great number of ethnicities. The majority of currently available studies have been published from eastern Asia, therefore, more studies of sarcopenia in south, southeastern, and western Asia should be promoted. On the other hand, most Asian studies have been conducted in a cross-sectional design and few longitudinal studies have not necessarily collected the commonly used outcome indicators as other reports from Western countries. Nevertheless, the AWGS consensus report is believed to promote more Asian sarcopenia research, and most important of all, to focus on sarcopenia intervention studies and the implementation of sarcopenia in clinical practice to improve health care outcomes of older people in the communities and the healthcare settings in Asia.


Gerontology | 2007

Associated factors and health impact of sarcopenia in older chinese men and women: a cross-sectional study.

Jenny Lee; Tung-Wai Auyeung; Timothy Kwok; Edith Lau; Ping Chung Leung; Jean Woo

Background: Sarcopenia is increasingly being recognized as a feature of frailty in old age and is associated with unfavorable health outcomes in Western populations. Little is known about sarcopenia among Asian elderly populations. Objectives: The study was undertaken to study the association between sarcopenia and common chronic illnesses, lifestyle factors, psychosocial well-being and physical performance. Methods: 4,000 community-dwelling Chinese elderly ≧65 years were recruited. Medical illnesses, cigarette smoking, alcohol consumption, physical activity level and psychosocial well-being scores were recorded. Physical performance measured included grip strength, timed chair-stands, stride length and a timed 6-meter walk. Muscle mass was measured using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. Relationships between appendicular skeletal muscle mass (ASM/ht2) and multiple variables were analyzed using uni- and multivariate analyses. Results: Mean ASM/ht2 was 7.19 and 6.05 kg/m2 in men and women respectively. Older age, cigarette smoking, chronic lung disease, atherosclerosis, underweight, and physical inactivity were associated with low adjusted ASM, which was in turn associated with poorer physical well-being in men. After adjustment to age, lower appendicular muscle mass was associated with weaker grip strength in both sexes. In men, lower limb tests (chair-stands, walking speed and step length) were not related to ASM, while in women, lower muscle mass was not associated with poorer lower limb muscle performance. Conclusions: Sarcopenia in community-dwelling older Chinese men and women was associated with cigarette smoking, chronic illnesses, underweight, physical inactivity, poorer well-being and upper limb physical performance.


Journal of the American Medical Directors Association | 2014

Transitions in Frailty States Among Community-Living Older Adults and Their Associated Factors

Jenny Lee; Tung-Wai Auyeung; Jason Leung; Timothy Kwok; Jean Woo

BACKGROUNDnFrailty renders older individuals more prone to adverse health outcomes. Little has been reported about the transitions between the different frailty states. We attempted to examine the rate of these transitions and their associated factors.nnnMETHODSnWe recruited 3018 Chinese community-living adults 65 years or older. Frailty status was classified according to the Fried criteria in 2 visits 2 years apart. Demographic data, medical conditions, hospitalizations, and cognition were recorded. Rates of transitions and associated factors were studied.nnnRESULTSnAt baseline, 850 (48.7%) men and 884 (52.6%) women were prefrail. Among these, 23.4% men and 26.6% women improved after 2 years; 11.1% of men and 6.6% of women worsened. More men than women (P < .001) deteriorated into frailty. Hospitalizations, older age, previous stroke, lower cognition, and osteoarthritis were risk factors for decline among prefrail participants. Having diabetes was associated with 50% lower chance of improvement in women. Among the robust, older age and previous cancer, hospitalizations, chronic lung diseases, and stroke were risk factors for worsening. Higher socioeconomic status was protective. Previous stroke reduced the chance of improvement by 78% in frail men. Only younger age was associated with improvement in frail women.nnnCONCLUSIONnWomen were less likely to decline in frailty status than men. Hospitalizations, older age, previous stroke, lower cognitive function, diabetes, and osteoarthritis were associated with worsening or less improvement. Older age, previous cancer, hospitalizations, lung diseases, and stroke were risk factors for worsening in the robust and higher socioeconomic status was protective.


Journal of the American Medical Directors Association | 2014

Long sleep duration is associated with higher mortality in older people independent of frailty: a 5-year cohort study.

Jenny Lee; Tung-Wai Auyeung; Jason Leung; Dicken Chan; Timothy Kwok; Jean Woo; Yun Kwok Wing

OBJECTIVESnAlthough general adult population studies show a U-shaped association between sleep duration and mortality, prolonged rather than short sleep duration was more consistently associated with higher mortality in older populations. Failing health or frailty is a possible mechanism. Thus, we examined the relationship among sleep duration, frailty status, and mortality in an elderly cohort.nnnMETHODSnA total of 3427 community-living adults 65 years or older were examined for general health, mood, subjective sleep measures (insomnia, napping, sleep apnea, nighttime sleep duration, sleep medications), frailty, and 5-year mortality.nnnRESULTSnAfter 5 years, 12.9% of men and 4.5% of women had died. Mean nighttime sleep duration was 7.3 hours. Proportion of participants who slept 10 or more hours increased with increasing frailty. Age-adjusted hazard ratio (HR) for 5-year mortality of long nighttime sleep (≥ 10 hours) was 2.10 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.33-3.33) in men, and 2.70 (95% CI 0.98-7.46) in women. The HR in men was attenuated (HR 1.75; 95% CI 1.09-2.81) after adjustment for frailty and other covariates, whereas that of women strengthened (HR 2.88; 95% CI 1.01-8.18). Mortality increased sharply with nighttime sleep of 10 hours or more. Nighttime sleep of 10 or more hours (HR 1.75, men; HR 2.88, women) and frailty (HR 2.43, men; HR 2.08, P = .08 in women) were independently associated with 5-year mortality after full adjustment for covariates.nnnCONCLUSIONnFrailty and long nighttime sleep duration of 10 or more hours were independently associated with 5-year mortality in older adults.


Journal of the American Medical Directors Association | 2014

Obesity can benefit survival-a 9-year prospective study in 1614 Chinese nursing home residents.

Jenny Lee; Tung-Wai Auyeung; P.H. Chau; Elsie Hui; Felix T.S. Chan; Iris Chi; Jean Woo

OBJECTIVEnWeight loss has been considered predictive of early mortality in nursing home residents. Lower body mass index, irrespective of weight loss, has also been considered detrimental for survival in community-dwelling older persons. We examined which of the 2 is more important for survival in nursing home residents and at what body mass index (BMI) cut-offs survival benefits are gained or lost.nnnDESIGNnProspective study.nnnSETTINGnNursing homes.nnnPARTICIPANTSnOne thousand six-hundred fourteen nursing home residents.nnnMEASUREMENTnMinimum Data Set at baseline and mortality status assessed at 6 months, 1, 2, 4, and 9 years later. Relationship between mortality and significant weight loss (≥5% over 30 days or ≥10% over 180 days), and BMI, was studied by Cox regression with both variables in the same model, adjusted for age, sex, medical conditions (cancer, renal failure, heart disease, dementia, hip fracture, diabetes mellitus), tube-feeding, 25% food left uneaten, swallowing problem, and the activities of daily living hierarchy scale.nnnRESULTSnOne thousand six-hundred fourteen residents (69.5% female) with mean age 83.7 ± 8.4 years and mean BMI 21.7 ± 4.8 were studied. Mortality rates were 6.3% (6-month), 14.3% (1-year), 27.1% (2-year), 47.3% (4-year), and 78.1% (9-year). Significant weight loss was not associated with higher mortality at all follow-up durations, whereas higher BMI was significantly protective: mortality reduction per 1 unit increase in BMI were 9% at 6 months, 10% at 1 year, 9% at 2 years, 7% at 4 years, and 5% at 9 years, all at P < .001. Having ≥25% of food left uneaten (51.2% of participants) had no relationship to survival at all follow-up durations. At 9 years, compared with those with BMI < 18.5kg/m(2), the normal weight (BMI 18.5-22.9 kg/m(2), Asia Pacific cut-off), overweight (BMI 23-25 kg/m(2), Asia Pacific cut-off) and obese (BMI > 25 kg/m(2), Asia Pacific cut-off) had significantly lower mortality (hazard ratio 0.65, 0.62, and 0.47, respectively, all P < .001).nnnCONCLUSIONSnSignificant weight loss as defined by the Minimum Data Set was not associated with short- or long-term survival in Chinese nursing home residents. BMI, however, is predictive of short- and long-term survival irrespective of weight loss in this population. Low BMI, detectable at a single point of time, may be another readily available alternative trigger point for possible interventions in reducing mortality risk. Obese residents had the lowest mortality compared with those with normal weight.


BMJ Open | 2016

Trends in activities of daily living disability in a large sample of community-dwelling Chinese older adults in Hong Kong: an age-period-cohort analysis

Ruby Yu; Moses Wong; Billy Chang; Xin Lai; Cm Lum; Tung-Wai Auyeung; Jenny Lee; Kelvin K.F. Tsoi; Ruby S. Y. Lee; Jean Woo

Background To examine the trends in activities of daily living (ADL) disability in older Chinese adults in Hong Kong between 2001 and 2012. Methods Using data from the Elderly Health Centres (EHCs) of the Department of Health comprising a total of 54u2005808 community-dwelling Chinese adults aged ≥65u2005years in 1 early cohort (1904–1917) and 10 3-year birth cohorts (1918–1920, 1921–1923, 1924–1926, 1927–1929, 1930–1932, 1933–1935, 1936–1938, 1939–1941, 1942–1944, 1945–1947), we examined trends in ADL disability by using age-period-cohort (APC) models. ADL disability was defined as being unable to perform at least 1 of 7 ADL activities (bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, feeding, grooming, walking) independently. Cross-classified random-effects logistic regressions were performed for each of the APC trends with adjustment for age, period, cohort, sociodemographic, lifestyle, comorbidity and self-rated health. Results The mean age of the cohort was 70.9±4.7 (range 65–99) years. The prevalence rate of ADL disability was 1.6%. ADL disability increased with age (p<0.001) and the gradient of the increase was steeper in the older age groups. At the same age, women (1.7%) were more likely to report ADL disability than men (1.4%, p=0.001). For both genders, there was an increase in ADL disability between 2003 and 2012; adjustment for age, cohort and other covariates has diminished the trends observed among men. There was no cohort effect in ADL disability. Conclusions ADL disability in older adults has increased over the last decade. Further study is required to identify possible causes behind the disability trends.


Age and Ageing | 2018

Trajectories of frailty among Chinese older people in Hong Kong between 2001 and 2012: an age-period-cohort analysis

Ruby Yu; Moses Wong; Ka Chun Chong; Billy Chang; Cm Lum; Tung-Wai Auyeung; Jenny Lee; Ruby S. Y. Lee; Jean Woo

Backgroundnthere is little evidence to suggest that older people today are living in better health than their predecessors did at the same age. Only a few studies have evaluated whether there are birth cohort effects on frailty, an indicator of health in older people, encompassing physical, functional and mental health dimensions.nnnObjectivesnthis study examined longitudinal trajectories of frailty among Chinese older people in Hong Kong.nnnMethodsnthis study utilised data from the 18 Elderly Health Centres of the Department of Health comprising a total of 417,949 observations from 94,550 community-dwelling Chinese people aged ≥65 years in one early birth cohort (1901-23) and four later birth cohorts (1924-29, 1930-35, 1936-41, 1942-47) collected between 2001 and 2012, to examine trajectories of the frailty index and how birth cohorts may have contributed to the trends using an age-period-cohort analysis.nnnResultsnmore recent cohorts had higher levels of frailty than did earlier cohorts at the same age, controlling for period, gender, marital status, educational levels, socioeconomic status, lifestyle and social factors. Older age, being female, widowhood, lower education and smoking were associated with higher levels of frailty.nnnConclusionnmore recent cohorts had higher levels of frailty than did earlier cohorts. Frailty interventions, coupled with early detection, should be developed to combat the increasing rates of frailty in Hong Kong Chinese.


Journal of Nutrition Health & Aging | 2018

Decline and Peripheral Redistribution of Fat Mass in Old Age - A Four-Year Prospective Study in 3018 Older Community-Living Adults

Tung-Wai Auyeung; J. Leung; Ruby Yu; Jenny Lee; T. Kwok; Jean Woo

BackgroundIt is widely recognized that fat will accumulate with ageing and is more prominent centrally. However, there were studies reported that fat might not gain either centrally or generally with ageing.MethodsThe baseline, 2-year and 4-year total body fat mas, trunk fat mass and percentage fat mass, were measured by DXA in 3018 community-living Chinese older than 65 years. The respective 4-year trajectories of adiposity were analyzed by repeated measure ANOVA p-for-trend test.ResultsThere was a trend of increase in total body fat mass in men and a decreasing trend in women but neither reached statistical significance. However, there was a significant increase in percent fat mass in both genders. Fat mass was relatively stable in the 2 young-old groups but it declined in the oldest group, aged 75 years or above. (men, p=0.017; women, p<0.001). On the contrary, a corresponding rise of percent fat mass was observed, which was steeper in the 2 younger age groups but did not change in the oldest group. For trunk fat mass, there was a statistically significant decreasing trend in women (p < 0.001) but it remained static in men (p = 0.092). The fat mass in upper limbs of both genders did not change but for the lower limbs, there was a statistically significant increase in both men (p < 0.001) and women (p < 0.02).ConclusionsAbsolute total body fat mass does not accumulate in old age and in the contrary, in the oldest old group (75 years or above), it declined instead. With ageing, fat will redistribute from the central region to the lower limbs.


Hong Kong Medical Journal | 2017

Diabetes in older people: position statement of The Hong Kong Geriatrics Society and the Hong Kong Society of Endocrinology, Metabolism and Reproduction

Cw Wong; Jenny Sw Lee; Kf Tam; Hf Hung; Wing Yee So; Ck Shum; Cy Lam; Jn Cheng; Sp Man; Tung-Wai Auyeung

Following a survey on the clinical practice of geriatricians in the management of older people with diabetes and a study of hypoglycaemia in diabetic patients, a round-table discussion with geriatricians and endocrinologists was held in January 2015. Consensus was reached for six domains specifically related to older diabetic people: (1) the considerations when setting an individualised diabetic management; (2) inclusion of geriatric syndrome screening in assessment; (3) glycaemic and blood pressure targets; (4) pharmacotherapy; (5) restrictive diabetic diet; and (6) management goals for nursing home residents.


Journal of Nutrition Health & Aging | 2011

Physical frailty predicts future cognitive decline - a four-year prospective study in 2737 cognitively normal older adults.

Tung-Wai Auyeung; Jenny Lee; T. Kwok; Jean Woo

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Jenny Lee

University of Hong Kong

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Jean Woo

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Timothy Kwok

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Ruby Yu

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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T. Kwok

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Billy Chang

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Edith Lau

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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J. Leung

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Jason Leung

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Moses Wong

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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