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The Clinical Significance of Body Weight Loss in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis Patients.

Authors :
Nakatsuka, Yoshinari
Handa, Tomohiro
Kokosi, Maria
Tanizawa, Kiminobu
Puglisi, Silvia
Jacob, Joseph
Sokai, Akihiko
Ikezoe, Kohei
Kanatani, Kumiko T.
Kubo, Takeshi
Tomioka, Hiromi
Taguchi, Yoshio
Nagai, Sonoko
Chin, Kazuo
Mishima, Michiaki
Wells, Athol U.
Hirai, Toyohiro
Source :
Respiration; Oct2018, Vol. 96 Issue 4, p338-347, 10p, 3 Charts, 2 Graphs
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: The significance of the nutritional status in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is largely unknown. Temporal body weight (BW) change, a dynamic index of nutrition status, can detect the malnutrition more accurately than the conventional single-point body mass index evaluation. Objective: To investigate how the temporal BW change influences the clinical courses of IPF. Methods: This multicenter study enrolled IPF patients from four referral hospitals of interstitial lung diseases in Japan (the Japanese cohort, the derivation cohort) and the Royal Brompton Hospital (the UK cohort, the validation cohort). The annual rate of BW change from the initial presentation was evaluated. A > 5% decrease of BW was defined as a significant BW loss. Results: Twenty-seven out of 124 patients in the Japanese cohort and 13 out of 86 patients in the UK cohort showed significant BW loss. Patients with BW loss showed significantly worse survival in both cohorts. Multivariate analyses revealed that BW loss was an independent factor for decreased survival (Japanese cohort: p = 0.047, UK cohort: p = 0.013). A 6.1% loss of BW was chosen as the optimal cutoff value to predict the 2-year mortality from the initial presentation. The stratified analysis revealed that a 6.1% or greater BW loss could predict worse survival specifically in cases without a greater than 10% decline in forced vital capacity (FVC). Conclusions: BW loss is independently associated with the survival of IPF patients, particularly when a decline in the FVC was not observed. Further studies are needed to understand the mechanisms underlying BW loss in IPF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00257931
Volume :
96
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Respiration
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
132154635
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000490355