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Volume 145, Issue 5, Pages 519-526 (May 2009)


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The correlation of nutrition risk index, nutrition risk score, and bioimpedance analysis with postoperative complications in patients undergoing gastrointestinal surgery

Marc Schiesser, MD, Philipp Kirchhoff, MD, Markus K. Müller, MD, Markus Schäfer, MD, Pierre-Alain Clavien, MD, PhDCorresponding Author Informationemail address

Accepted 4 February 2009. published online 31 March 2009.

Background

Malnutrition in gastrointestinal (GI) surgery is associated with increased morbidity. Therefore, careful screening remains crucial to identify patients at risk for malnutrition and consequently postoperative complications. The aim of this study was to evaluate the ability of 3 established score systems to identify patients at risk of developing postoperative complications in GI surgery and to assess the correlation among the score systems.

Methods

We evaluated prospectively 200 patients admitted for elective GI surgery using (1) nutrition risk index, (2) nutrition risk score, and (3) bioelectrical impedance analysis. Complications were assessed using a standardized complication classification. The findings of the score systems were correlated with the incidence and severity of complications. Parametric and nonparametric correlation analysis was performed among the different score systems.

Results

All 3 score systems correlated significantly with the incidence and severity of postoperative complications and the duration of hospital stay. Using multiple regression analysis, only nutrition risk score and malignancy remained prognostic factors for the development of complications with odds ratios of 4.2 (P = .024) and 5.6 (P < .001), respectively. The correlation between nutrition risk score and nutrition risk index was only moderate (Pearson coefficient = 0.54). Bioelectrical impedance analysis displayed only weak to trivial correlation to the nutrition risk index (0.32) and nutrition risk score (0.19), respectively.

Conclusion

The nutrition risk score, nutrition risk index, and bioimpedance analysis correlate with the incidence and severity of perioperative complications in GI surgery. The nutrition risk score was the best score in predicting patients who will develop complications in this study population. The correlation between the individual scores was only moderate, and therefore, they do not necessarily identify the same patients.

Department of Surgery, University Hospital Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland

Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: Pierre-Alain Clavien, MD, PhD, Department of Surgery, University Hospital of Zurich, Raemistrasse 100, CH-8091 Zürich, Switzerland.

PII: S0039-6060(09)00078-6

doi:10.1016/j.surg.2009.02.001


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