Aim: We aimed to show the relationship between preoperative prognostic nutritional index and postoperative delirium in patients who had undergone gastrointestinal cancer surgery. Materials and Methods: Our study is a single-center, prospective, observational study. Routine preoperative anesthesia evaluation of all patients was performed and patient's age, sex, ASA physical score, body mass index (BMI), existing comorbid diseases, level of education, smoking status, cancer diagnosis, chemotherapy and radiotherapy history, type of surgery, past invasive interventions, concentration of hemoglobin and albumin, lymphocyte count, liver and kidney function tests were recorded. PNI score was calculated with the preoperative measurements. With the calculated PNI score, nutritional status was defined as normal (PNI ≥50), mild malnutrition (PNI 45-50), moderate-severe malnutrition (PNI 40-45), and severe (PNI \<40) accordingly. The patients were then evaluated for the presence of delirium using the Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) for 3 days postoperatively.
Aim: Malnutrition, common among gastrointestinal cancer patients, affects morbidity and mortality. Prognostic nutritional index (PNI) is an inflammation-based scoring that measures the nutritional and immunological status of patients and has been used to determine prognosis and predict postoperative complications. Postoperative delirium (POD) describes a neurocognitive complication that may occur after surgery and anesthesia. Most of the studies examining the relationship between PNI and POD are retrospective and the number of prospective large case series are insufficient. In this study, we aimed to show the relationship between preoperative prognostic nutritional index and postoperative delirium in patients who had undergone gastrointestinal cancer surgery. Materials and Methods: Our study is a single-center, prospective, observational study. Routine preoperative anesthesia evaluation of all patients was performed and patient's age, sex, ASA physical score, body mass index (BMI), existing comorbid diseases, level of education, smoking status, cancer diagnosis, chemotherapy and radiotherapy history, type of surgery, past invasive interventions, concentration of hemoglobin and albumin, lymphocyte count, liver and kidney function tests were recorded. PNI score was calculated with the preoperative measurements. With the calculated PNI score, nutritional status was defined as normal (PNI ≥50), mild malnutrition (PNI 45-50), moderate-severe malnutrition (PNI 40-45), and severe (PNI \<40) accordingly. The patients were then evaluated for the presence of delirium using the Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) for 3 days postoperatively.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
134
Prognostic nutritional index is an inflammation-based scoring that measures the nutritional and immunological status of patients and has been used to determine prognosis and predict postoperative complications.
Muhammet Aydın Akdoğan
Ankara, Turkey (Türkiye)
Evaluation of the development of delirium
Evaluation of whether delirium develops in postoperative patients within the first 3 days using the Confusion Assessment Method (CAM)
Time frame: 15 October 2021-20 May 2022
demographic characteristics
Evaluation of patients' age, gender, education level and their relationship with delirium
Time frame: 15 October 2021-15 June 2022
amount of bleeding
The relationship between the amount of bleeding and delirium
Time frame: 15 October 2021-15 June 2022
biochemical parameters
Evaluation of the patients' lymphocyte count, hemoglobin, albumin, urea, creatinine, AST, ALT concentrations and their relationship with delirium
Time frame: 15 October 2021-15 June 2022
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