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Epidemiology, Controversies, and Dilemmas of Perioperative Nutritional Risk/Malnutrition: A Narrative Literature Review.

Authors :
He M
Long Y
Peng R
He P
Luo Y
Zhang Y
Wang W
Yu X
Deng L
Zhu Z
Source :
Risk management and healthcare policy [Risk Manag Healthc Policy] 2025 Jan 13; Vol. 18, pp. 143-162. Date of Electronic Publication: 2025 Jan 13 (Print Publication: 2025).
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

Current perioperative nutrition management is discouraging due to the under-recognition of clinical nutrition and the lagging development of clinical nutriology. This review aimed to identify and explore epidemiology, related adverse outcomes, controversies, and dilemmas of perioperative nutritional risk/malnutrition to call for further development of perioperative nutritional medicine. Databases including PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, Wanfang Database, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, China Biology Medicine disc, and Chongqing VIP Database were searched for articles published between January 1, 2014 and August 31, 2024 using the following MeSH terms: ("nutritional risk"[Title/Abstract] OR "malnutrition"[Title/Abstract] OR "undernutrition"[Title/Abstract]) AND ("surgery"[Title/Abstract] OR "surgical"[Title/Abstract] OR "operative"[Title/Abstract] OR "operation"[Title/Abstract]). The incidence of nutritional risk was in the 20% range in patients undergoing elective surgery, 54% in older adults, 44-70% in patients with tumors or major elective surgeries, and 50-55% in children. The incidence of malnutrition ranged from 11-77% in surgical patients. Nutrition-related perioperative adverse events included mainly infection, wound healing disorders, reoperation and unplanned readmission, prolonged hospital stay, mortality, perioperative neurocognitive dysfunction, and venous thrombosis. Current controversies and dilemmas in this field include the low rates of nutrition screening and medical nutrition therapy, numerous nutrition screening tools and malnutrition diagnostic criteria, no consensus on optimal assessment method, low level of evidence-based clinical nutrition research and lack of in-depth mechanistic studies, inconsistent timing of nutrition assessment, lack of reports for community hospitals, small hospitals, and low/middle-income countries or regions, and under-recognition of micronutrient malnutrition. It is, therefore, necessary for perioperative patients to undergo nutritional screening at the first outpatient visit before surgery and/or on admission. Perioperative nutritional management needs urgent attention and requires a multidisciplinary team, including anesthesia, nursing, nutrition, and surgery.<br />Competing Interests: The authors declare they have no competing interests in this work.<br /> (© 2025 He et al.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1179-1594
Volume :
18
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Risk management and healthcare policy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39829608
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2147/RMHP.S496098