The Predictive Value of Changes in Body Mass Index for the Incidence of Device-Specific Infections in Patients With Implantable Left Ventricular Assist Devices

Background:Implantable left ventricular assist devices (LVAD) have improved quality of life and survival in patients with advanced heart failure. However, LVAD-specific infections and predicting which patients will develop infections remain challenging. This study investigated whether changes in bod...

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Veröffentlicht in:Circulation Journal 2021/08/25, Vol.85(9), pp.1460-1468
Hauptverfasser: Sujino, Yasumori, Watanabe, Takuya, Iwasaki, Yoichi, Komeyama, Shotaro, Yoshitake, Koichi, Yagi, Nobuichiro, Anegawa, Eiji, Mochizuki, Hiroki, Nakajima, Seiko, Kuroda, Kensuke, Seguchi, Osamu, Yanase, Masanobu, Fukushima, Satsuki, Fujita, Tomoyuki, Muramatsu, Toshihiro, Nishimura, Shigeyuki, Nakano, Shintaro, Fukushima, Norihide
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background:Implantable left ventricular assist devices (LVAD) have improved quality of life and survival in patients with advanced heart failure. However, LVAD-specific infections and predicting which patients will develop infections remain challenging. This study investigated whether changes in body mass index (BMI) during hospitalization following LVAD implantation are associated with LVAD-specific infections within 1 year of implantation.Methods and Results:Patients (n=135) undergoing LVAD implantation were retrospectively divided into 2 groups based on changes in BMI from LVAD implantation to discharge: those with and without decreases in BMI. Each group was further subdivided according to baseline albumin concentrations (high [>3.7 g/dL] and low [≤3.7 g/dL]). Twenty patients developed LVAD-specific infections within 1 year. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis resulted in a ∆BMI cut-off of less than −0.128 kg/m2. In multivariate analysis, younger patients and those with decreases in BMI had significantly higher rates of LVAD-specific infection (P=0.010 and P=0.035, respectively). LVAD-specific infection rates were significantly higher for patients with low albumin and decreases in BMI than for patients with low albumin but no decrease in BMI.Conclusions:Decreases in BMI during hospitalization after LVAD implantation and younger age were independently associated with LVAD-specific infection within 1 year. Strict patient management may be needed to avoid decreases in BMI during hospitalization after LVAD implantation, particularly in patients with low baseline albumin concentrations.
ISSN:1346-9843
1347-4820
1347-4820
DOI:10.1253/circj.CJ-20-1197