Increased malnutrition risk is a frequent finding in newly hospitalized overweight/obese adults, prolongs length of hospital stay and increases risk of in-hospital mortality.
AbstractThe objective of the work was to study admission parameters associated with
an increased incidence of hypoglycemia during hospitalization of
non-critically ill patients. Included in this cross-sectional study were
patients admitted to internal medicine units. The Nutritional Risk Screening
2002 (NRS2002) was used for nutritional screening. Data recorded included
admission serum albumin (ASA) and all glucose measurements obtained by the
institutional blood glucose monitoring system. Neither of these are included
in the NRS2002 metrics. Hypoalbuminemia was defined as ASA<3.5
g/dl. Patients were categorized as hypoglycemic if they had at least
one documented glucose≤70 mg/dl during the hospitalization
period. Included were 1342 patients [median age 75 years (IQR
61–84), 51.3% male, 52.5% with diabetes mellitus,
(DM)], who were screened during three distinct periods of time from
2011–2018. The incidence of hypoglycemia was 10.8% with
higher rates among DM patients (14.6 vs. 6.6%, p<0.001).
Hypoglycemia incidence was negatively associated with ASA regardless of DM
status. Multivariable regression showed that ASA (OR 0.550 per g/dl,
95% CI 0.387–0.781, p=0.001) and positive NRS2002
(OR 1.625, 95% CI 1.072–2.465, p=0.022) were
significantly associated with hypoglycemia. The addition of hypoalbuminemia
status to the NRS2002 tool improved the overall sensitivity from 0.55 to
0.71, but reduced specificity from 0.63 to 0.46. The negative predictive
value was 0.93. Our data suggest that the combination of positive
malnutrition screen and hypoalbuminemia upon admission are independently
associated with the incidence of hypoglycemia among non-critically ill
patients, regardless of diabetes mellitus status.
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