Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2931286 International Journal of Cardiology 2011 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundCachexia frequently complicates chronic heart failure (CHF) and predicts an ominous prognosis. Hormonal and inflammatory environment differ between cachectic and non-cachectic patients. Nutritional markers of cardiac cachexia and prognostic predictors in this context are not completely understood.ObjectivesTo study biochemical markers of nutritional status in cardiac cachexia and to investigate variables associated with worse prognosis.MethodsA total of 94 ambulatory patients — 38 cachectics and 56 non-cachectics — were recruited. Cardiac cachexia was defined as a weight loss of ≥ 7.5%. An anthropometric evaluation was performed in all patients and blood was collected for several laboratory determinations: haemoglobin, lymphocytes, albumin, transferrin, pre-albumin, cholesterol and triglycerides. Patients were included in a prospective cohort study.ResultsCachectics had lower albumin and pre-albumin levels. They also had lower haemoglobin, lymphocytes and triglycerides. Levels of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, and catabolic hormones were higher in the cachectic group. Low pre-albumin was the only nutritional marker independently associated with cardiac cachexia. (OR = 1.08, CI: 1.01–1.17). During a follow-up of 16.2 ± 5.2 months, 15 (39.4%) cachectic patients and 6 (10.7%) non-cachectics died. In the cachectic group, lower cholesterol was independently associated with worse outcome (HR = 1.32, CI: 1.11–1.57).ConclusionsPre-albumin seems to be the best laboratory marker of undernutrition in CHF. Low cholesterol independently associates with worse outcome in cardiac cachexia.

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