Wagner Doris, DeMarco Mara McAdams, Amini Neda, Buttner Stefan, Segev Dorry, Gani Faiz, Pawlik Timothy M
Doris Wagner, Mara McAdams DeMarco, Neda Amini, Stefan Buttner, Dorry Segev, Faiz Gani, Timothy M Pawlik, Division of Surgical Oncology, Department of Surgery, the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD 21287, United States.
World J Gastrointest Surg. 2016 Jan 27;8(1):27-40. doi: 10.4240/wjgs.v8.i1.27.
According to the United States census bureau 20% of Americans will be older than 65 years in 2030 and half of them will need an operation - equating to about 36 million older surgical patients. Older adults are prone to complications during gastrointestinal cancer treatment and therefore may need to undergo special pretreatment assessments that incorporate frailty and sarcopenia assessments. A focused, structured literature review on PubMed and Google Scholar was performed to identify primary research articles, review articles, as well as practice guidelines on frailty and sarcopenia among patients undergoing gastrointestinal surgery. The initial search identified 450 articles; after eliminating duplicates, reports that did not include surgical patients, case series, as well as case reports, 42 publications on the impact of frailty and/or sarcopenia on outcome of patients undergoing gastrointestinal surgery were included. Frailty is defined as a clinically recognizable state of increased vulnerability to physiologic stressors resulting from aging. Frailty is associated with a decline in physiologic reserve and function across multiple physiologic systems. Sarcopenia is a syndrome characterized by progressive and generalized loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength. Unlike cachexia, which is typically associated with weight loss due to chemotherapy or a general malignancy-related cachexia syndrome, sarcopenia relates to muscle mass rather than simply weight. As such, while weight reflects nutritional status, sarcopenia - the loss of muscle mass - is a more accurate and quantitative global marker of frailty. While chronologic age is an important element in assessing a patient's peri-operative risk, physiologic age is a more important determinant of outcomes. Geriatric assessment tools are important components of the pre-operative work-up and can help identify patients who suffer from frailty. Such data are important, as frailty and sarcopenia have repeatedly been demonstrated among the strongest predictors of both short- and long-term outcome following complicated surgical procedures such as esophageal, gastric, colorectal, and hepato-pancreatico-biliary resections.
根据美国人口普查局的数据,到2030年,20%的美国人年龄将超过65岁,其中一半人需要进行手术——这相当于约3600万老年外科患者。老年人在胃肠道癌治疗期间容易出现并发症,因此可能需要进行特殊的术前评估,包括衰弱和肌肉减少症评估。我们在PubMed和谷歌学术上进行了一次有针对性的、结构化的文献综述,以确定关于接受胃肠道手术患者的衰弱和肌肉减少症的原始研究文章、综述文章以及实践指南。初步搜索共识别出450篇文章;在剔除重复项、不包括外科患者的报告、病例系列以及病例报告后,纳入了42篇关于衰弱和/或肌肉减少症对接受胃肠道手术患者结局影响的出版物。衰弱被定义为一种临床上可识别的状态,即由于衰老导致对生理应激源的易感性增加。衰弱与多个生理系统的生理储备和功能下降有关。肌肉减少症是一种以骨骼肌质量和力量进行性和全身性丧失为特征的综合征。与恶病质不同,恶病质通常与化疗导致的体重减轻或一般的恶性肿瘤相关恶病质综合征有关,肌肉减少症与肌肉质量有关,而不仅仅是体重。因此,虽然体重反映营养状况,但肌肉减少症——肌肉质量的丧失——是更准确和定量的衰弱整体指标。虽然实际年龄是评估患者围手术期风险的一个重要因素,但生理年龄是结局的更重要决定因素。老年评估工具是术前检查的重要组成部分,有助于识别衰弱患者。这些数据很重要,因为在诸如食管、胃、结肠和肝胰胆切除等复杂手术的短期和长期结局的最强预测因素中,衰弱和肌肉减少症已多次得到证实。