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Serum Albumin as Predictor of Nutritional Status in Patients with ESRD

Authors :
Abdul Rashid Qureshi
Peter Stenvinkel
Peter Bárány
Bengt Lindholm
Thiane Gama-Axelsson
Olof Heimbürger
Source :
Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. 7:1446-1453
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2012.

Abstract

Serum albumin is a widely used biomarker of nutritional status in patients with CKD; however, its usefulness is debated. This study investigated serum albumin and its correlation with several markers of nutritional status in incident and prevalent dialysis patients.In a cross sectional study, serum albumin (bromocresol purple), and other biochemical (serum creatinine), clinical (subjective global assessment [SGA]), anthropometric (handgrip strength, skinfold thicknesses), and densitometric (dual energy x-ray absorptiometry) markers of nutritional status were assessed in 458 incident (61% male; mean age 54 +/- 13 years; GFR, 6.6 +/-2.3 ml/min per 1.73 m(2); recruited 1994–2010) and 383 prevalent (56% male; mean age 62 +/- 14 years; recruited 1989–2004) dialysis patients.In incident patients: serum albumin was correlated with sex (beta = -0.13; P = 0.02), diabetes mellitus (beta = -0.18; P = 0.004), and urinary albumin excretion (beta = -0.42; P = 0.001) but less so with poor nutritional status (SGA score1; beta = -0.19; P = 0.001). In prevalent patients, serum albumin was correlated with age (beta = -0.14; P = 0.05), high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (beta = -0.34; P = 0.001), diabetes mellitus (beta = -0.11; P = 0.04), and SGA score1 (beta = -0.14; P = 0.003). In predicting nutritional status assessed by SGA and other markers, adding serum albumin to models that included age, sex, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease did not significantly increase explanatory power.In incident and prevalent dialysis patients,serum albumin correlates poorly with several markers of nutritional status. Thus, its value as a reliable marker of nutritional status in patients with ESRD is limited. In addition, the following inconsistencies between the main text and Tables 1 and 3 are also corrected as follows. (1) In Table 1, the GFR initially written as 6 +/- 3 ml/min per 1.73(2) should be corrected to 6.6 +/- 2.3 ml/min per 1.73(2). (2) On line 11 of page 1448, under the Clinical Correlates of Serum Albumin Concentration section describing the multiple regression models (Table 3), the P value was initially written as“serum albumin was associated with age (beta = -0.14; P = 0.05).” The P value should be corrected to have the same value as that given in Table 3 (beta = -0.14; P = 0.005. [corrected].

Details

ISSN :
15559041
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2d2394859b81ac912d7356eac474f56c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2215/cjn.10251011