Highlight
This study demonstrates a clear association between increasing Modified Frailty Index (mFI-5) scores and elevated short-term postoperative complications following total thyroidectomy, including hypocalcemia, vocal fold paralysis, surgical-site infections, hematomas, and emergency department visits. The findings argue for integrating frailty assessment into preoperative evaluations to enhance risk stratification and guide clinical decision-making.
Study Background
Total thyroidectomy remains a common surgical procedure for diverse thyroid pathologies such as nodular disease, malignancy, and hyperthyroidism. While generally safe, this surgery carries risk for several short-term complications, notably hypocalcemia due to parathyroid gland disruption, vocal fold paralysis from recurrent laryngeal nerve injury, and postoperative hematoma, which can be life-threatening if not promptly managed. Identifying patients at heightened risk preoperatively is crucial to optimize surgical outcomes and patient counseling.
Frailty—a multidimensional syndrome characterized by diminished physiological reserve and vulnerability to stressors—has gained attention as a predictor of surgical outcomes. The Modified Frailty Index, a five-item score derived from comorbidities, is a validated, practical tool used across surgical disciplines for risk stratification. However, its predictive value specific to total thyroidectomy complications has not been thoroughly established.
Study Design
This retrospective cohort study utilized the extensive TriNetX U.S. Network database, encompassing a robust sample of 65,866 adult patients who underwent total thyroidectomy between 2006 and 2025. Patients were categorized into four groups based on their mFI-5 scores: 0, 1, 2, and ≥3, determined by the presence of five ICD-10-coded comorbid conditions. Propensity score matching accounted for potential confounders such as demographic and clinical characteristics to strengthen comparability among groups.
Primary endpoints included common short-term postoperative complications within 30 days: hypocalcemia, vocal fold paralysis, surgical-site infection, hematoma, need for tracheostomy, mortality, and emergency department visits. Logistic regression analyses estimated odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals, comparing each frailty category to the mFI-5=0 baseline to quantify risk increments.
Key Findings
The study confirmed a statistically significant increase in postoperative complications correlating with higher mFI-5 scores. Specifically:
– Hypocalcemia risk increased steadily with frailty: OR=1.22 (95% CI, 1.14-1.32) for mFI-5=1 and OR=1.59 (95% CI, 1.29-1.95) for mFI-5≥3.
– Vocal fold paralysis was significantly more likely in the highest frailty group (mFI-5≥3; OR=2.27 [95% CI, 1.49-3.46]), suggesting frailty is an important predictor of recurrent laryngeal nerve injury risk.
– Emergency department visits escalated progressively with frailty: OR=1.36 (95% CI, 1.23-1.51) at mFI-5=1 and OR=2.28 (95% CI, 1.72-3.03) at mFI-5≥3, indicating increased postoperative healthcare utilization.
– Surgical-site infection and tracheostomy were elevated at mFI-5=2 with ORs of 1.93 (95% CI, 1.20-3.10) and 2.00 (95% CI, 1.08-3.73) respectively. For mFI-5≥3 groups, these outcomes were less certain due to smaller sample sizes.
– Postprocedural neck hematoma showed a marked risk increase at mFI-5≥3 (OR=2.60 [95% CI, 1.45-4.64]).
– Mortality events were rare and thus did not yield reliable estimations.
These findings highlight a dose-response relationship between frailty burden and complication risk, underscoring the clinical importance of mFI-5 as a predictive metric.
Expert Commentary
The demonstrated association between higher mFI-5 scores and adverse outcomes after thyroidectomy aligns with broader surgical literature highlighting frailty as a determinant of postoperative risk. By incorporating frailty assessments, clinicians can better stratify patients beyond traditional risk factors such as age and isolated comorbidities.
However, certain limitations merit consideration. Use of a retrospective database inherently risks selection bias and potential misclassification based on ICD-10 coding accuracy. The relatively small size of the most frail (≥3) subgroup limits precision for some endpoints. Additionally, mortality being rare in this cohort may reflect appropriate patient selection or effective perioperative care but precludes definitive mortality risk analysis related to frailty.
Mechanistically, frailty may reflect systemic vulnerabilities: impaired wound healing, reduced immunocompetence, and decreased physiological reserve that cumulatively predispose to complications such as infections, bleeding, and nerve injury susceptibility. This biological plausibility strengthens the case for routine mFI-5 integration into preoperative workflows.
Conclusion
This comprehensive analysis convincingly establishes that increased frailty, as measured by the Modified Frailty Index, is independently associated with heightened short-term postoperative complications and healthcare utilization following total thyroidectomy. Recognition of frailty provides a valuable adjunct to traditional risk assessment tools, facilitating personalized surgical planning, risk counseling, and targeted perioperative optimization.
Future prospective studies should validate these findings and evaluate interventions to mitigate frailty-related risks, such as prehabilitation or tailored perioperative management protocols. Clinicians performing thyroid surgery should consider routine mFI-5 screening to enhance prognostication and improve patient outcomes.
Funding and ClinicalTrials.gov
Not reported in the source publication.
References
1. Jung T, Ahmad E, Ayo-Ajibola O, et al. Association Between the Modified Frailty Index and Short-Term Total Thyroidectomy Complications. Laryngoscope. 2026 Jul 3. PMID: 42400109.
2. Farhat JS, Velanovich V, Falvo AJ, et al. Are the frail destined to fail? Frailty index as predictor of surgical outcomes in older patients. J Am Coll Surg. 2012;215(2):215-221.
3. Makary MA, Segev DL, Pronovost PJ, et al. Frailty as a predictor of surgical outcomes in older patients. J Am Coll Surg. 2010;210(6):901-908.
4. Lee DH, Buth KJ, Martin BJ, et al. Frail patients are at increased risk for mortality and prolonged institutional care after cardiac surgery. Circulation. 2010;121(8):973-978.

