终末期肾病患者的营养状况与生存

W F Owen
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引用次数: 26

摘要

一些报告强调,营养的实验室替代指标,如血清白蛋白、肌酐和胆固醇浓度,在统计上比透析剂量更能独立预测透析患者的死亡风险。由于这些血液检查相对简单,费用低,解释简单,透析界大大提高了其作为病人护理过程绩效衡量指标的重要性,可以说没有充分考虑其意义。如果透析患者的营养不良是死亡风险的一个强有力的预测指标,并且可以通过纠正干预措施降低死亡风险,那么这些实验室测试受到欢迎的热情是适当的。然而,营养不良的实验室替代指标之间的统计相关性,或其他营养不足的测量方法(如体重指数或主观的整体评估)表明营养摄入、营养状况和结果之间存在直接因果关系的假设可能是不正确的。这种明显的联系可能是单独选择统计模型的结果,即,除了导致营养不良之外,另一种未被认识到的医疗状况可能是死亡的近因。营养不良可能对终末期肾病(ESRD)患者的生存产生不利影响的机制尚不清楚。轻度营养不良对患者生存的影响,其对生存的直接影响,以及它们对患者生存的独立影响的现实也没有得到充分的定义。显然,在假定的实验室营养替代品和病人存活率之间存在统计学上的联系。不管这种因果关系的病理生物学意义如何,我们都有理由去探究一种导致营养参数积极变化的干预措施是否能提高患者的生存率。这些问题周围的营养状况和生存的ESRD患者在这里详细回顾。这篇评论的结论是,需要更多的研究来确定营养不良是否真的是ESRD患者预后的一个独立和敏感的预测因子。
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Nutritional status and survival in end-stage renal disease patients.

Several reports have emphasized that putative laboratory surrogates of nutrition, such as serum albumin, creatinine, and cholesterol concentrations are statistically more powerful independent predictors of odds risk of death for dialysis patients than is the delivered dose of dialysis. In view of the relative simplicity with which these blood tests can be obtained, their lack of expense, and simplicity in interpretation, the dialysis community has greatly escalated their importance as performance measures for the processes of patient care, arguably without full consideration of their meaning. If malnutrition in dialysis patients is a powerful predictor of death risk, and is amenable to corrective interventions that result in a reduction in the odds risk of death, then the zeal with which these laboratory tests have been embraced is appropriate. However, the assumption that a statistical correlation between laboratory surrogates of malnutrition, or other measures of inadequate nutrition, such as body mass index or a subjective global assessment, indicate a direct causal relationship between nutritional intake, nutritional status, and outcome may be incorrect. Such apparent linkages may be a consequence of the statistical model selected alone, i.e., another unappreciated medical condition may be the proximate cause of death in addition to resulting in malnutrition. The mechanism(s) by which malnutrition may adversely impact the survival of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients is unclear. The impact of milder degrees of malnutrition on patient survival, their proximate effect on survival, and the reality of their independent effect on patient survival are also inadequately defined. Clearly, there is a statistical link between the putative laboratory surrogates of nutrition and patient survival. Regardless of the pathobiology of such a causal link, it is valid to enquire if an intervention that results in a positive change in nutritional parameters enhances patient survival. These issues surrounding nutritional status and survival in patients with ESRD are reviewed here in detail. The conclusion of this critique is that additional studies are needed to determine if malnutrition is truly an independent and responsive predictor of outcome for ESRD patients.

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Author Index Vol. 25, 1999 Manuscript Consultants Contents Vol. 25, 1999 Subject Index Vol. 25, 1999 Subject Index Vol. 25, No. 4–6, 1999
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