Exploring the intersections of frailty, sarcopenia, and cachexia with malnutrition

Author:

Jensen Gordon L.1ORCID,Cederholm Tommy23

Affiliation:

1. Dean's Office and Department of Medicine Larner College of Medicine, University of Vermont Burlington Vermont USA

2. Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences, Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism Uppsala University Uppsala Sweden

3. Theme Inflammation & Aging Karolinska University Hospital Stockholm Sweden

Abstract

AbstractThis review examines our current understanding of consensus definitions for frailty, sarcopenia, and cachexia and their perceived overlap with malnutrition. Patients with these syndromes will often meet the criteria for malnutrition. It is common for these overlap syndromes to be misapplied by practitioners, and confusion has been further exacerbated by the lack of a common malnutrition language. To address the latter concern, we recommend using either the standalone Global Leadership Initiative in Malnutrition (GLIM) framework or the GLIM consensus criteria integrated with other accepted approaches as dictated by preference and available resources. Established care standards should guide the recognition and treatment of malnutrition to promote optimal clinical outcomes and quality of life. The effectiveness of nutrition interventions may be reduced in settings of severe acute inflammation and in end‐stage disease that is associated with cachexia. However, such interventions may still assist patients to tolerate treatments that target the underlying etiology for an overlap syndrome, and they may help to improve select clinical outcomes and quality of life. Recent, large, well‐designed randomized controlled trials have demonstrated the compelling positive clinical effects of medical nutrition therapy. The application of concurrent malnutrition risk screening and assessment is therefore a high priority. The necessity to deliver specific interventions that target the underlying mechanisms of these overlap syndromes and also diagnose and address malnutrition is paramount. It must be highlighted that securing beneficial outcomes for frailty, sarcopenia, and cachexia will also require nonnutrition interventions, like comprehensive care plans, pharmacologic agents, and prescribed exercise.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference43 articles.

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5. Dalhousie University. Geriatric medicine research: clinical frailty score. Accessed April 13 2024.https://www.dal.ca/sites/gmr/our-tools/clinical-frailty-scale.html

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