Dietary Provision, GLIM-Defined Malnutrition and Their Association with Clinical Outcome: Results from the First Decade of nutritionDay in China

Author:

Zhou Bei12,Zhang Yupeng1,Hiesmayr Michael3ORCID,Gao Xuejin1,Huang Yingchun1,Liu Sitong1,Shen Ruting1,Zhao Yang4ORCID,Cui Yao5,Zhang Li1,Wang Xinying1,

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Surgery, Jinling Hospital, Medical School of Nanjing University, 305 East Zhongshan Road, Nanjing 210002, China

2. Department of Nutrition, Acupuncture, Moxibustion and Massage College, Health Preservation and Rehabilitation College, Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine, 138 Xianlin Road, Nanjing 210023, China

3. Center for Medical Data Science, Section for Medical Statistics, Medical University Vienna, Spitalgasse 23, A-1090 Vienna, Austria

4. Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Nanjing Medical University, 101 Longmian Avenue, Nanjing 211166, China

5. Department of Nutrition, Pizhou Hospital, Xuzhou Medical University, Xuzhou 221004, China

Abstract

Malnutrition is a common and serious issue that worsens patient outcomes. The effects of dietary provision on the clinical outcomes of patients of different nutritional status needs to be verified. This study aimed to identify dietary provision in patients with eaten quantities of meal consumption and investigate the effects of dietary provision and different nutritional statuses defined by the GLIM criteria on clinical outcomes based on data from the nutritionDay surveys in China. A total of 5821 adult in-patients from 2010 to 2020 were included in this study’s descriptive and Cox regression analyses. Rehabilitation and home discharge of 30-day outcomes were considered a good outcome. The prevalence of malnutrition defined by the GLIM criteria was 22.8%. On nutritionDay, 51.8% of all patients received dietary provisions, including hospital food and a special diet. In multivariable models adjusting for other variables, the patients receiving dietary provision had a nearly 1.5 higher chance of a good 30-day outcome than those who did not. Malnourished patients receiving dietary provision had a 1.58 (95% CI [1.36–1.83], p < 0.001) higher chance of having a good 30-day outcome and had a shortened length of hospital stay after nutritionDay (median: 7 days, 95% CI [6–8]) compared to those not receiving dietary provision (median: 11 days, 95% CI [10–13]). These results highlight the potential impacts of the dietary provision and nutritional status of in-patients on follow-up outcomes and provide knowledge on implementing targeted nutrition care.

Funder

National Science and Technology Research Funding

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Science Foundation of Outstanding Youth in Jiangsu Province

“The 13th Five-Year Plan” Foundation of Jiangsu Province for Medical Key Talents

Jiangsu Province science and technology program social development-Clinical frontier technology project

Publisher

MDPI AG

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