2021
DOI: 10.1007/s11748-021-01667-5
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Effect of malnutrition and frailty status on surgical aortic valve replacement

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Cited by 10 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Commonly used frailty assessment tools have been discussed elsewhere. 28 In the surgical setting, a variety of tools has been used, such as the modified 5‐Item Frailty Index (mFI‐5), 103 the Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index, 104 the Rockwood Clinical Frailty Scale, 105 the Edmonton Frail Scale, 106 and the Fried frailty criteria. 107 In regard to screening tools, newer, easy‐to‐use instruments such as the Sunfrail ( http://www.sunfrail.eu/ ), consistent with the biopsychosocial model, is now available, 108 although its use in surgery is yet to be explored.…”
Section: Assessing Malnutrition: a Focus On Novel And Nascent Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Commonly used frailty assessment tools have been discussed elsewhere. 28 In the surgical setting, a variety of tools has been used, such as the modified 5‐Item Frailty Index (mFI‐5), 103 the Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index, 104 the Rockwood Clinical Frailty Scale, 105 the Edmonton Frail Scale, 106 and the Fried frailty criteria. 107 In regard to screening tools, newer, easy‐to‐use instruments such as the Sunfrail ( http://www.sunfrail.eu/ ), consistent with the biopsychosocial model, is now available, 108 although its use in surgery is yet to be explored.…”
Section: Assessing Malnutrition: a Focus On Novel And Nascent Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Data published by Miguelena were only collected up to 6 months postprocedure. 17 Isolated SAVR patients alone are included in three out of four SAVR studies (56% of patients in the study by Naganuma et al underwent a concomitant valve or coronary bypass procedure 18 ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Applicability concerns were raised for studies by Kleczynski (due to the median STS score of 12% indicating a higher baseline risk in this group) and Naganuma (due to greater than 50% of patients undergoing an additional procedure at the time of AVR). 18 21 It was also noted that a high number of SAVR patients (879/1253) screened as part of the Afilalo study were not enrolled, most commonly due to patient and/or researcher unavailability for a preprocedure interview, which may have predisposed to selection bias. 15 …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although older patients do not necessarily always meet the definition of ‘frail’, there is a significant correlation between advanced age and frailty as discussed above. In the setting of cardiac surgery, frail patients fare worse than nonfrail counterparts in metrics, such as ICU and hospital length of stay [16 ▪ ,17 ▪ ], readmission rate [17 ▪ ,18 ▪ ], associated costs/utilization of resources [18 ▪ ,19], and mortality [16 ▪ ,19,20 ▪ ,21–23]. Not only is in-hospital increased in the frail population [16 ▪ ,19], but long-term mortality, up to 1 year, is increased by four-fold in frail patients undergoing cardiac surgery ( n = 604, OR = 4.63, 95% CI = 2.21–9.69, P < 0.001) [20 ▪ ].…”
Section: Frailty In Cardiac Surgerymentioning
confidence: 99%