Ladd Mitchell R, Garcia Alejandro V, Leeds Ira L, Haney Courtney, Oliva-Hemker Maria M, Alaish Samuel, Boss Emily, Rhee Daniel S
Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
Department of Pediatric Nutrition, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD.
J Pediatr Surg. 2018 Nov;53(11):2336-2345. doi: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2018.04.026. Epub 2018 Apr 27.
Pediatric patients with Crohn disease (CD) are frequently malnourished, yet how this affects surgical outcomes has not been evaluated. This study aims to determine the effects of malnourishment in children with CD on 30-day outcomes after surgery.
The ACS NSQIP-Pediatric database from 2012 to 2015 was used to select children aged 5-18 with CD who underwent bowel surgery. BMI-for-age Z-scores were calculated based on CDC growth charts and 2015 guidelines of pediatric malnutrition were applied to categorize severity of malnutrition into none, mild, moderate, or severe. Malnutrition's effects on 30-day complications. Propensity weighted multivariable regression was used to determine the effect of malnutrition on complications were evaluated.
516 patients were included: 349 (67.6%) without malnutrition, 97 (18.8%) with mild, 49 (9.5%) with moderate, and 21 (4.1%) with severe malnutrition. There were no differences in demographics, ASA class, or elective/urgent case type. Overall complication rate was 13.6% with malnutrition correlating to higher rates: none 9.7%, mild 18.6%, moderate 20.4%, and severe 28.6% (p < 0.01). In propensity-matched, multivariable analysis, malnutrition corresponded with increased odds of complications in mild and severely malnourished patients (mild OR = 2.1 [p = 0.04], severe OR 3.26 [p = 0.03]).
Worsening degrees of malnutrition directly correlate with increasing risk of 30-day complications in children with CD undergoing major bowel surgery. These findings support BMI for-age z scores as an important screening tool for preoperatively identifying pediatric CD patients at increased risk for postoperative complications. Moreover, these scores can guide nutritional optimization efforts prior to elective surgery.
IV.
克罗恩病(CD)患儿常伴有营养不良,但这对手术结果的影响尚未得到评估。本研究旨在确定CD患儿营养不良对术后30天结果的影响。
使用2012年至2015年的美国外科医师学会国家外科质量改进计划-儿科数据库,选取5至18岁接受肠道手术的CD患儿。根据美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)生长图表计算年龄别体重指数(BMI)Z评分,并应用2015年儿科营养不良指南将营养不良严重程度分为无、轻度、中度或重度。评估营养不良对30天并发症的影响。采用倾向加权多变量回归分析确定营养不良对并发症的影响。
共纳入516例患者:349例(67.6%)无营养不良,97例(18.8%)轻度营养不良,49例(9.5%)中度营养不良,21例(4.1%)重度营养不良。在人口统计学、美国麻醉医师协会(ASA)分级或择期/急诊病例类型方面无差异。总体并发症发生率为13.6%,营养不良与更高的发生率相关:无营养不良者为9.7%,轻度营养不良者为18.6%,中度营养不良者为20.4%,重度营养不良者为28.6%(p<0.01)。在倾向匹配的多变量分析中,轻度和重度营养不良患者的营养不良与并发症几率增加相关(轻度:比值比[OR]=2.1[p=0.04],重度:OR=3.26[p=0.03])。
营养不良程度加重与接受大肠手术的CD患儿术后30天并发症风险增加直接相关。这些发现支持年龄别BMI Z评分作为术前识别术后并发症风险增加的儿科CD患者的重要筛查工具。此外,这些评分可指导择期手术前的营养优化工作。
IV级。