作者
Aya Riad,Stephen R Knight,Dhruva Ghosh,Pamela Alice Kingsley,Marie Carmela Lapitan,Marie Dione Parreno‐Sacdalan,Sudha Sundar,Ahmad Uzair Qureshi,Apple P. Valparaiso,Riinu Pius,Catherine A Shaw,Thomas M Drake,Lisa Norman,Adesoji Ademuyiwa,Adewale Adisa,María Lorena Aguilera,Sara W Al‐Saqqa,Ibrahim Al‐Slaibi,Aneel Bhangu,Bruce Biccard,Peter Brocklehurst,Sorrel Burden,Kathryn Chu,Ainhoa Costas‐Chavarri,Anna Dare,Muhammed Elhadi,Cameron J. Fairfield,J.E.F. Fitzgerald,James Glasbey,Mark I. van Berge Henegouwen,JC Allen Ingabire,T. Peter Kingham,Ismaïl Lawani,Bettina Lieske,Richard Lilford,Laura Magill,Mayaba Maimbo,Janet Martin,Sonia Mathai,Kenneth A McLean,Rachel Moore,Dion Morton,Dmitri Nepogodiev,John Norrie,Faustin Ntirenganya,Francesco Pata,Thomas Pinkney,Rajkumar Kottayasamy Seenivasagam,Antonio Ramos‐De la Medina,Tracey Roberts,Hosni Salem,Ana Margarida Correia,Richard J.E. Skipworth,Richard T. Spence,Neil Smart,Stephen Tabiri,Evropi Τheodoratou,Hannah S. Thomas,Thomas G. Weiser,Malcolm West,John Whitaker,Edwin Mwintiereh Ta-ang Yenli,Ewen M Harrison
摘要
Background Malnutrition represents a key priority for global health policy, yet the impact of nutritional state on cancer surgery worldwide remains poorly described.We aimed to analyse the effect of malnutrition on early postoperative outcomes following elective surgery for colorectal or gastric cancer. MethodsWe did an international, multicentre, prospective cohort study of patients undergoing elective surgery for colorectal or gastric cancer between April 1, 2018, and Jan 31, 2019.Patients were excluded if the primary pathology was benign, they presented with cancer recurrence, or if they underwent emergency surgery (within 72 h of hospital admission).Malnutrition was defined with the Global Leadership Initiative on Malnutrition criteria.The primary outcome was death or a major complication within 30 days of surgery.Multilevel logistic regression and a three-way mediation analysis were done to establish the relationship between country income group, nutritional status, and 30-day postoperative outcomes. FindingsThis study included 5709 patients (4593 with colorectal cancer and 1116 with gastric cancer) from 381 hospitals in 75 countries.The mean age was 64•8 years (SD 13•5) and 2432 (42•6%) patients were female .Severe malnutrition was present in 1899 (33•3%) of 5709 patients, with a disproportionate burden in upper-middle-income countries (504 [44•4%] of 1135) and low-income and lower-middle-income countries (601 [62•5%] of 962).After adjustment for patient and hospital risk factors, severe malnutrition was associated with an increased risk of 30-day mortality across all country income groups (high income: adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 1•96 [95% CI 1•14-3•37], p=0•015; upper-middle income: 3•05 [1•45-6•42], p=0•003; low income and lower-middle income: 11•57 [5•87-22•80], p<0•0001).Severe malnutrition mediated an estimated 32% of early deaths in low-income and lower-middle-income countries (aOR 1•41 [95% CI 1•22-1•64]) and an estimated 40% of early deaths in upper-middle-income countries (1•18 [1•08-1•30]).Interpretation Severe malnutrition is common in patients undergoing surgery for gastrointestinal cancers and is a risk factor for 30-day mortality following elective surgery for colorectal or gastric cancer.There is an urgent need to examine whether perioperative nutritional interventions can improve early outcomes following gastrointestinal cancer surgery worldwide.