Association of Nutritional Risk Index With Infection-Related Hospitalization and Death After Hospitalization in Patients Undergoing Maintenance Hemodialysis

Patients undergoing dialysis frequently experience hospitalization due to cardiovascular disease (CVD) and infection. This population is also at high risk of rehospitalization and subsequent death. In addition to serious outcomes, hospitalization incurs substantial medical cost. Prevention of hospit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of renal nutrition 2024-07
Hauptverfasser: Mori, Katsuhito, Yamamoto, Yosuke, Hanafusa, Norio, Yamamoto, Suguru, Fukuma, Shingo, Onishi, Yoshihiro, Emoto, Masanori, Inaba, Masaaki
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Patients undergoing dialysis frequently experience hospitalization due to cardiovascular disease (CVD) and infection. This population is also at high risk of rehospitalization and subsequent death. In addition to serious outcomes, hospitalization incurs substantial medical cost. Prevention of hospitalization is accordingly an urgent matter. Here, we examined whether nutritional disorder was associated with hospitalization and subsequent death. The study was conducted under a prospective design using data from the Japanese Dialysis Outcomes and Practice Pattern Study. The exposure was the Nutritional Risk Index for Japanese Hemodialysis (NRI-JH), through which patients were divided into low-, medium-, and high-risk groups, with the low-risk group as referent. The primary outcome was CVD-related or infection-related hospitalization. Secondary outcome was all-cause mortality. For exploratory analyses, the associations of baseline or latest NRI-JH just before hospitalization, with death after hospitalizations, were examined. Of 4021 patients, 566 patients had CVD-related hospitalization and 375 had infection-related hospitalization during a median follow-up of 2.6 years. NRI-JH at baseline was significantly associated with infection-related hospitalization but not with CVD-related hospitalization, in multivariable Cox models (hazard ratio [HR] 1.46, 95% confidential interval [CI]: 1.09 to 1.97, P = .012 for medium-risk vs. low-risk group) (HR 2.46, 95% CI: 1.81 to 3.35, P 
ISSN:1051-2276
1532-8503
1532-8503
DOI:10.1053/j.jrn.2024.07.017