The association between GLIM criteria–defined malnutrition and 2‐year unplanned hospital admission in outpatients with unintentional weight loss: A retrospective cohort study

Author:

Duan Ruoshu1ORCID,Zhang Qi2,Zhu Jiahong1,Sun Yujing1,Ye Kangli1,Li Shuai1,Liu Ying1,Wang Lei3,Zhao Min4,Zhu Lu5,Qiu Yan1,Ren Wen1,Qin Hongli1,Chen Mingmin1,Zhang Xiaochen6,Ren Jingjing1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Practice, The First Affiliated Hospital Zhejiang University School of Medicine Hangzhou China

2. Department of Colorectal Surgery Cancer Hospital of the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences/Zhejiang Cancer Hospital Hangzhou China

3. Department of Clinical Nutrition, The First Affiliated Hospital Zhejiang University School of Medicine Hangzhou China

4. Department of Clinical Nutrition The Six Medical Center of PLA General Hospital Beijing China

5. Health Management Center, The First Affiliated Hospital Zhejiang University School of Medicine Hangzhou China

6. Department of Medical Oncology, The First Affiliated Hospital Zhejiang University School of Medicine Hangzhou China

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThis study aimed to assess malnutrition using the Global Leadership Initiative on Malnutrition (GLIM) criteria and Subjective Global Assessment (SGA) at baseline and determine the GLIM criteria that best predicted unplanned hospitalization in outpatients with unintentional weight loss (UWL).MethodsWe performed a retrospective cohort study of 257 adult outpatients with UWL. The GLIM criteria and SGA agreement were reported using the Cohen kappa coefficient. Kaplan‐Meier survival curves and adjusted Cox regression analyses were used for survival data. Logistic regression was used for the other correlation analysis.ResultsThis study collected data from 257 patients for 2 years. Based on the GLIM criteria and SGA, malnutrition prevalence was 79.0% and 72.0%, respectively (κ = 0.728, P < 0.001). Using the SGA as a standard, GLIM had a sensitivity of 97.8%, a specificity of 69.4%, a positive predictive value of 89.2%, and a negative predictive value of 92.6%. Malnutrition was associated with higher rates of unplanned hospital admission independent of other prognostic factors (GLIM: hazard ratio [HR]=2.85, 95% CI=1.22–6.68; SGA: HR=2.07, 95% CI=1.13–3.79). Of the five GLIM criteria–related diagnostic combinations, disease burden or inflammation was the most important to predict unplanned hospital admission in multivariable analysis (HR=3.27, 95% CI=2.03–5.28).ConclusionThere was good agreement between the GLIM criteria and the SGA. GLIM‐defined malnutrition, as well as all five GLIM criteria–related diagnosis combinations, had the potential to predict unplanned hospital admissions in outpatients with UWL within 2 years.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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