Link between nutritional status and death in COVID-19 :- Medznat
EN | RU
EN | RU

Help Support

Back

Nutritional screening predicts mortality in hospitalized COVID-19 patients

Nutritional screening predicts mortality in hospitalized COVID-19 patients Nutritional screening predicts mortality in hospitalized COVID-19 patients
Nutritional screening predicts mortality in hospitalized COVID-19 patients Nutritional screening predicts mortality in hospitalized COVID-19 patients

What's new?

COVID-19 patients at risk can be identified by evaluating the nutritional status along with the established diagnostic protocol.

Malnutrition or poor nutritional status was found to be related to mortality in hospitalized COVID-19 patients, a retrospective observational study in Nutrition Journal explained. Feier Song et al. assessed the nutritional and baseline clinical features of coronavirus-infected individuals and studied the possible link between malnutrition/poor nutrition/undernutrition at the time of admission and mortality risk in hospitalized patients.

The clinical data of mild or moderate, severe, critically ill COVID-19-infected individuals and mortality were assembled. Simple screening tools like Controlling Nutritional Status (CONUT) score, Geriatric nutritional risk index (GNRI) in elderly patients and Prognostic nutritional index (PNI) were used for examining malnutrition risk examination.

A total of 295 patients (66 severe patients; 41 critically ill patients) were registered for the study. Overall, 25 deaths were noted, contributing to 8.47% in the entire population and 37.88% in  critically ill individuals. The patients had notable differences in nutrition-linked parameters and inflammatory biomarkers among different disease severity. Patients with higher CONUT scores along with lower GNRI and PNI were more prone to in-hospital mortality. 

The receiver operating characteristic curves illustrated a good prognostic implication of CONUT score and GNRI. As found, the baseline nutritional status was a prognostic indicator for death/mortality. This study brought about novel understandings of nutritional monitoring and the significance of nutritional screening at hospitalization.

Source:

Nutrition Journal

Article:

Nutritional screening based on objective indices at admission predicts in-hospital mortality in patients with COVID-19

Authors:

Feier Song et al.

Comments (0)

You want to delete this comment? Please mention comment Invalid Text Content Text Content cannot me more than 1000 Something Went Wrong Cancel Confirm Confirm Delete Hide Replies View Replies View Replies en ru ua
Try: