BackgroundNutritional problem after surgery for Hirschprung’s disease (HSCR) was not optimistic. This study aimed to analyze the risk factors of postoperative undernutrition for patients with HSCR and establish a scoring system for predicting postoperative undernutrition.MethodsRetrospective review of 341 patients with HSCR who received Laparoscopic-assisted pull-through surgery in a tertiary-level pediatric hospital was conducted with assessments of clinical data. Univariate/multivariate Logistic regression analysis was used to identify independent factors of postoperative undernutrition, and establish a scoring system for predicting postoperative nutritional status based on the sum of adjusted odds ratios (ORs).ResultsThe postoperative undernutrition of 341 patients with HSCR was 29.9%. Multivariate Logistic regression analysis showed that non-breast feeding (mixed: OR = 6.116, artificial: OR = 12.00), preoperative undernutrition (risk of malnutrition: OR = 7.951, malnutrition: OR = 8.985), non-parental caregivers (OR = 3.164), long-segment HSCR (OR = 12.820), postoperative complications within 30 days (grade 1 ~ 2: OR = 2.924, Grade 3 ~ 4: OR = 6.249), and surgery for other systemic malformation (OR = 5.503) were risk factors for postoperative undernutrition (all p < 0.05), and scoring system was developed based on these determinants. The area under the receiver operator characteristic curve of the derivation sample was 0.887 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.839–0.934) and that of the validation sample was 0.846 (95% CI: 0.772 ~ 0.920) with the optimal cut-off value of 12; calibration curves of the derivation sample showed considerable predictive performance for postoperative undernutrition.ConclusionRisk factors identified affecting postoperative undernutrition should be taken seriously in patients with HSCR. We successfully developed a desirable scoring system to predict postoperative nutritional status, which might be helpful for clinical practice.