Relationship between sarcopenia/myosteatosis and frailty in hospitalized patients with cirrhosis: a sex-stratified analysis

Background: Previous studies have shown that sarcopenia appears to be a significant contributor to physical frailty among outpatients with cirrhosis. However, the evidence is scant regarding the relationship between sarcopenia and multi-dimensional frailty among inpatients. We aimed to investigate t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Therapeutic advances in chronic disease 2021, Vol.12, p.20406223211026996-20406223211026996
Hauptverfasser: Feng, Hongjuan, Wang, Xiaoyu, Mao, Lihong, Yu, Zihan, Cui, Binxin, Lin, Lin, Hui, Yangyang, Zhao, Xingliang, Xu, Xin, Fan, Xiaofei, Wang, Bangmao, Yu, Qingxiang, Jiang, Kui, Sun, Chao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: Previous studies have shown that sarcopenia appears to be a significant contributor to physical frailty among outpatients with cirrhosis. However, the evidence is scant regarding the relationship between sarcopenia and multi-dimensional frailty among inpatients. We aimed to investigate the potential contribution of sarcopenia to frailty in hospitalized patients with cirrhosis in a sex-dependent manner. Methods: This cohort enrolled consecutive cirrhotics. Muscle quantity and quality were assessed using the computed tomography-based skeletal muscle index (SMI) and intramuscular adipose tissue content, respectively. Frailty phenotype was clarified by a self-reported Frailty Index. Multiple linear regression determined the association between sarcopenia and frailty phenotype. Results: A total of 202 cirrhotic patients with 48.5% male were included. The median Frailty Index was 0.13, rendering 17.3% subjects as frail. Among the 16 frail men, 68.8% had sarcopenia and 62.5% exhibited myosteatosis. In contrast, among the 19 frail women, 26.3% had sarcopenia and 15.8% exhibited myosteatosis. Frail patients had a significantly lower median SMI (42.80 cm2/m2) compared with those with pre-frailty (48.23 cm2/m2) and with robust status (50.82 cm2/m2) in the male but not the female group. In male patients, multivariate linear regression implicated age (β = 0.330, p 
ISSN:2040-6223
2040-6231
DOI:10.1177/20406223211026996