Katalinic Lea, Premuzic Vedran, Basic-Jukic Nikolina, Barisic Ivan, Jelakovic Bojan
Department of Nephrology, Hypertension, Dialysis and Transplantation, University Hospital Centre Zagreb, Kispaticeva 12, 10 000, Zagreb, Croatia.
J Artif Organs. 2019 Sep;22(3):230-236. doi: 10.1007/s10047-019-01098-3. Epub 2019 Mar 9.
Series of studies have described malnutrition as one of the main non-traditional risk factors associated with poor prognosis and treatment outcome in patients on hemodialysis (HD). The aims of this study were to evaluate the link between HD treatment quality and the nutritional status and to additionally investigate the association of malnutrition and overall survival. A total of 134 adult out-patients (56.4% male, mean age 60.8 ± 16.15 years) were enrolled in the study. Clinical and laboratory data were obtained from the medical records. Anthropometric measurements were performed prior to HD. Malnutrition-Inflammation Score (MIS) was used as a scoring system representing the severity of protein-energy wasting (PEW). Malnourished patients were significantly older when compared to non-malnourished patients. They had significantly longer dialysis vintage and lower residual diuresis, BMI, serum proteins, and albumins and lean tissue index (LTI). Malnourished patients survived significantly shorter than non-malnourished patients. Hypoproteinemic patients had significantly lower values of serum albumins and LTI and survived shorter than normoproteinemic patients. Only malnourishment and age were associated with higher overall mortality in all groups of patients. By focusing on MIS and serum protein status rather than dialysis-related factors and different treatment techniques, we could accomplish better nutrition status and improved overall outcomes. While anticipating new and more effective measures for preventing malnutrition, our results clearly demonstrate that striving for the highest possible nutrition status should be one of the key strategies in improving the outcomes in this specific group of patients.
一系列研究已将营养不良描述为与血液透析(HD)患者预后不良和治疗结果相关的主要非传统风险因素之一。本研究的目的是评估HD治疗质量与营养状况之间的联系,并进一步调查营养不良与总体生存率的关联。共有134名成年门诊患者(男性占56.4%,平均年龄60.8±16.15岁)纳入本研究。临床和实验室数据从病历中获取。在HD治疗前进行人体测量。营养不良-炎症评分(MIS)用作代表蛋白质-能量消耗(PEW)严重程度的评分系统。与非营养不良患者相比,营养不良患者年龄显著更大。他们的透析龄显著更长,残余尿量、体重指数、血清蛋白、白蛋白和瘦组织指数(LTI)更低。营养不良患者的存活时间明显短于非营养不良患者。低蛋白血症患者的血清白蛋白和LTI值显著更低,存活时间短于正常蛋白血症患者。在所有患者组中,只有营养不良和年龄与更高的总体死亡率相关。通过关注MIS和血清蛋白状态而非透析相关因素和不同治疗技术,我们可以实现更好的营养状况和改善总体结果。在期待新的更有效的预防营养不良措施的同时,我们的结果清楚地表明,争取尽可能高的营养状况应是改善这一特定患者群体预后的关键策略之一。