National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry, Department of Mental Disorder Research, National Institute of Neuroscience, Tokyo 187-0031, Japan.
Department of Psychiatric Nursing and Mental Health, Faculty of Nursing, Alexandria University, Alexandria 21527, Egypt.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Mar 9;18(5):2772. doi: 10.3390/ijerph18052772.
Malnutrition is common among severe patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), mainly elderly adults and patients with comorbidities. It is also associated with atypical presentation of the disease. Despite the possible contribution of malnutrition to the acquisition and severity of COVID-19, it is not clear which nutritional screening measures may best diagnose malnutrition in these patients at early stages. This is of crucial importance given the urgency and rapid progression of the disease in vulnerable groups. Accordingly, this review examines the available literature for different nutritional screening approaches implemented among COVID-19 patients, with a special focus on elderly adults. After a literature search, we selected and scrutinized 14 studies assessing malnutrition among COVID-19 patients. The Nutrition Risk Screening 2002 (NRS-2002) has demonstrated superior sensitivity to other traditional screening measures. The controlling nutritional status (CONUT) score, which comprises serum albumin level, cholesterol level, and lymphocytes count, as well as a combined CONUT-lactate dehydrogenase-C-reactive protein score expressed a predictive capacity even superior to that of NRS-2002 (0.81% and 0.92% vs. 0.79%) in midlife and elder COVID-19 patients. Therefore, simple measures based on routinely conducted laboratory investigations such as the CONUT score may be timely, cheap, and valuable alternatives for identifying COVID-19 patients with high nutritional risk. Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA) was the only measure used to detect residual malnutrition and high malnutrition risk in remitting patients-MNA scores correlated with hypoalbuminemia, hypercytokinemia, and weight loss. Older males with severe inflammation, gastrointestinal symptoms, and pre-existing comorbidities (diabetes, obesity, or hypertension) are more prone to malnutrition and subsequently poor COVID-19 prognosis both during the acute phase and during convalescence. Thus, they are in need of frequent nutritional monitoring and support while detecting and treating malnutrition in the general public might be necessary to increase resilience against COVID-19.
营养不良在患有 2019 冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的重症患者中很常见,主要是老年人和合并症患者。它也与疾病的非典型表现有关。尽管营养不良可能导致 COVID-19 的发生和严重程度增加,但目前尚不清楚哪些营养筛查措施可以在疾病早期阶段最佳诊断这些患者的营养不良。考虑到疾病在弱势群体中的紧迫性和快速进展,这一点至关重要。因此,本综述检查了针对 COVID-19 患者实施的不同营养筛查方法的现有文献,特别关注老年人。经过文献检索,我们选择并仔细审查了评估 COVID-19 患者营养不良的 14 项研究。营养风险筛查 2002 版(NRS-2002)对其他传统筛查措施具有更高的敏感性。控制营养状况(CONUT)评分包括血清白蛋白水平、胆固醇水平和淋巴细胞计数,以及结合 CONUT-乳酸脱氢酶-C 反应蛋白评分,即使在中年和老年 COVID-19 患者中,其预测能力也优于 NRS-2002(0.81%和 0.92%比 0.79%)。因此,基于常规进行的实验室检查的简单措施,如 CONUT 评分,可能是及时、廉价和有价值的替代方法,用于识别有高营养风险的 COVID-19 患者。迷你营养评估(MNA)是唯一用于检测缓解期患者残留营养不良和高营养风险的方法-MNA 评分与低白蛋白血症、高细胞因子血症和体重减轻相关。炎症严重、有胃肠道症状和存在合并症(糖尿病、肥胖或高血压)的老年男性更容易发生营养不良,随后 COVID-19 预后不良,无论是在急性阶段还是在恢复期。因此,他们需要频繁的营养监测和支持,同时在普通人群中检测和治疗营养不良可能有助于提高对 COVID-19 的抵抗力。