- Cawthon, Peggy M;
- Patel, Sheena M;
- Kritchevsky, Stephen B;
- Newman, Anne B;
- Santanasto, Adam;
- Kiel, Douglas P;
- Travison, Thomas G;
- Lane, Nancy;
- Cummings, Steven R;
- Orwoll, Eric S;
- Duchowny, Kate A;
- Kwok, Timothy;
- Hirani, Vasant;
- Schousboe, John;
- Karlsson, Magnus K;
- Mellström, Dan;
- Ohlsson, Claes;
- Ljunggren, Östen;
- Xue, Qian-Li;
- Shardell, Michelle;
- Jordan, Joanne M;
- Pencina, Karol M;
- Fielding, Roger A;
- Magaziner, Jay;
- Correa-de-Araujo, Rosaly;
- Bhasin, Shalender;
- Manini, Todd M
- Editor(s): Le Couteur, David
Background
Cut-points to define slow walking speed have largely been derived from expert opinion.Methods
Study participants (13 589 men and 5043 women aged ≥65years) had walking speed (m/s) measured over 4-6 m (mean ± SD: 1.20 ± 0.27 m/s in men and 0.94 ± 0.24 m/s in women.) Mobility limitation was defined as any self-reported difficulty with walking approximately 1/4 mile (prevalence: 12.6% men, 26.4% women). Sex-stratified classification and regression tree (CART) models with 10-fold cross-validation identified walking speed cut-points that optimally discriminated those who reported mobility limitation from those who did not.Results
Among 5043 women, CART analysis identified 2 cut-points, classifying 4144 (82.2%) with walking speed ≥0.75 m/s, which we labeled as "fast"; 478 (9.5%) as "intermediate" (walking speed ≥0.62 m/s but <0.75 m/s); and 421 (8.3%) as "slow" (walking speed <0.62 m/s). Among 13 589 men, CART analysis identified 3 cut-points, classifying 10 001 (73.6%) with walking speed ≥1.00 m/s ("very fast"); 2901 (21.3%) as "fast" (walking speed ≥0.74 m/s but <1.00 m/s); 497 (3.7%) as "intermediate" (walking speed ≥0.57 m/s but <0.74 m/s); and 190 (1.4%) as "slow" (walking speed <0.57 m/s). Prevalence of self-reported mobility limitation was lowest in the "fast" or "very fast" (11% for men and 19% for women) and highest in the "slow" (60.5% in men and 71.0% in women). Rounding the 2 slower cut-points to 0.60 m/s and 0.75 m/s reclassified very few participants.Conclusions
Cut-points in walking speed of approximately 0.60 m/s and 0.75 m/s discriminate those with self-reported mobility limitation from those without.