Kaizu Y, Tsunega Y, Yoneyama T, Sakao T, Hibi I, Miyaji K, Kumagai H
Department of Clinical Nutrition, School of Food and Nutritional Sciences, University of Shizuoka, Japan.
Clin Nephrol. 1998 Jul;50(1):44-50.
Studies were performed to investigate the association of the body mass index (BMI) with long-term survival of non-diabetic hemodialysis patients who were monitored for up to 12 years.
In 116 patients having undergone hemodialysis in 1984, a Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was performed, and a proportional hazard model was applied to calculate the relative risk of mortality in body mass index quintiles.
Those patients with BMI of less than 16.9 kg/m2 and more than 23.0 kg/m2 showed lowered survival relative to the patients with BMI of 17.0-18.9 kg/m2. A proportional hazard model revealed that the patients with BMI of less than 16.9 kg/m2 had the highest risk of mortality independent of age, gender, smoking, duration of hemodialysis, serum albumin, blood pressure and urea reduction rate. Those patients with BMI of over 19.0 kg/m2 also had a high risk of mortality which was progressively elevated with increasing BMI. This higher risk of mortality in those patients with high BMI was associated with such atherosclerotic risk factors as low HDL-cholesterol and high total-/HDL-cholesterol ratio. The number of hospitalizations showed a similar trend to mortality in the body mass index quintiles. The survivors lost their body weight slightly but significantly for 12 years, although there were no significant changes in serum albumin and creatinine. Serum albumin, prealbumin and IGF-1 were within normal range in 1996, suggesting that the survivors did not exhibit severe malnutrition.
These results suggest that long-term survival could be attained by patients with relatively low BMI who have no serious nutritional problems. Nutritional intervention might be required in the overweight patients, in addition to extremely lean patients.
开展研究以调查体重指数(BMI)与非糖尿病血液透析患者长达12年监测期的长期生存之间的关联。
对1984年接受血液透析的116例患者进行Kaplan-Meier生存分析,并应用比例风险模型计算BMI五分位数组中死亡的相对风险。
BMI小于16.9kg/m²和大于23.0kg/m²的患者相对于BMI为17.0 - 18.9kg/m²的患者生存率降低。比例风险模型显示,BMI小于16.9kg/m²的患者独立于年龄、性别、吸烟、血液透析时长、血清白蛋白、血压和尿素清除率,具有最高的死亡风险。BMI超过19.0kg/m²的患者也有较高的死亡风险,且随着BMI升高而逐渐增加。BMI较高的患者这种较高的死亡风险与诸如低高密度脂蛋白胆固醇和高总胆固醇/高密度脂蛋白胆固醇比值等动脉粥样硬化风险因素相关。住院次数在BMI五分位数组中显示出与死亡率相似的趋势。尽管血清白蛋白和肌酐无显著变化,但幸存者在12年中体重略有但显著下降。1996年血清白蛋白﹑前白蛋白和胰岛素样生长因子-1在正常范围内,表明幸存者未表现出严重营养不良。
这些结果表明,BMI相对较低且无严重营养问题的患者可实现长期生存。除了极瘦的患者外,超重患者可能也需要营养干预。