Pifer Trinh B, McCullough Keith P, Port Friedrich K, Goodkin David A, Maroni Bradley J, Held Philip J, Young Eric W
University Renal Research and Education Association, Department of Medicine, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and Division of Nephrology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Kidney Int. 2002 Dec;62(6):2238-45. doi: 10.1046/j.1523-1755.2002.00658.x.
Nutritional status is strongly associated with outcomes among hemodialysis patients. We analyzed the independent predictive value of several readily measured nutritional indicators, including a modified subjective global assessment (mSGA), body mass index (BMI), serum albumin, serum creatinine, normalized protein catabolic rate (nPCR), serum bicarbonate, lymphocyte count, and neutrophil count, using baseline and six-month follow-up measurements.
The study sample consisted of 7719 U.S. adult hemodialysis patients enrolled in the international Dialysis Outcomes and Practice Patterns Study (DOPPS), a prospective observational study that includes a random sample of hemodialysis patients from 145 dialysis facilities in the United States. Cox regression was used to estimate the relative risk of mortality associated with differences in measurements at baseline and six months later. Each analysis was adjusted for age, race, sex, and 15 summary comorbid conditions.
Lower baseline measurements of mSGA, BMI, serum albumin, serum creatinine, and lymphocyte count were independently associated with significantly higher risk of mortality. During six-month follow-up, decreases in BMI, serum albumin, and serum creatinine were also associated with significantly higher mortality risk. The risk of mortality increased with higher baseline and six-month increases in neutrophil count.
This study confirms that several readily-measured nutritional indicators predict mortality among hemodialysis patients and that changes in indicator values over six months provide additional important prognostic information. Interventions that modify these indicators of nutritional status may have an important impact on the survival of hemodialysis patients.
营养状况与血液透析患者的预后密切相关。我们使用基线测量值和六个月随访测量值,分析了几种易于测量的营养指标的独立预测价值,这些指标包括改良主观全面评定法(mSGA)、体重指数(BMI)、血清白蛋白、血清肌酐、标准化蛋白分解代谢率(nPCR)、血清碳酸氢盐、淋巴细胞计数和中性粒细胞计数。
研究样本包括7719名参与国际透析结果与实践模式研究(DOPPS)的美国成年血液透析患者,这是一项前瞻性观察性研究,包括从美国145个透析机构随机抽取的血液透析患者样本。采用Cox回归来估计与基线测量值和六个月后测量值差异相关的死亡相对风险。每项分析都对年龄、种族、性别和15种汇总合并症进行了校正。
mSGA、BMI、血清白蛋白、血清肌酐和淋巴细胞计数的较低基线测量值与显著更高的死亡风险独立相关。在六个月的随访期间,BMI、血清白蛋白和血清肌酐的下降也与显著更高的死亡风险相关。死亡风险随着中性粒细胞计数的基线升高和六个月内的升高而增加。
本研究证实,几种易于测量的营养指标可预测血液透析患者的死亡率,并且指标值在六个月内的变化提供了额外重要的预后信息。改善这些营养状况指标的干预措施可能对血液透析患者的生存产生重要影响。