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The Relationship of BMI and Lung Transplant Recipients

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Title: The Relationship of BMI and Lung Transplant Recipients


1
The Relationship of BMI and Lung Transplant
Recipients
  • ??? ??? ???
  • ???? ??? ???

2
Lung transplant
BMI
risk of mortality
3
Literature(1)
  • Influence of Nutritional Status in Lung
    Transplant Recipients

4
Introduction
Serum albumin
predict malnutrition and mortality among
hospitalized patients
serum prealbumin
Purpose post transplantation survival rates
Body Mass Index
5
Methods
  • BMI
  • Serum albumin
  • Serum prealbumin

BMI
Group 1 lt18.5
Group 2 18.524.9
Group 3 2527.5
Group 4 gt27.5
6
Result

7
Result
  • Obese patients (BMIgt27.5 )
  • ? risk of mortality
  • Low levels of prealbumin ( level lt18 gr/dL)
  • ? risk of mortality
  • Low levels of albumin
  • ? No association about mortality

8
Conclusion
Low pretransplant prealbumin levels
BMIgt27.5
mortality
9
Literature(2)
  • Obesity and Underweight Are Associated with an
    Increased Risk of Death after Lung Transplantation

10
Introduction
  • Obesity (BMI gt30 kg/m2) is considered a relative
    contraindication.
  • ?Little is known about underweight(BMI lt18.5
    kg/m2)
  • Underweight ? higher risk of death after lung
    transplantation
  • ? 1- or 5-year mortality was unknown

11
Purpose
pretransplant
after lung transplantation
risk of death
Obesity v.s underweight
  • We hypothesized that underweight and obesity
    would be associated with an increased risk of
    death after transplantation after adjustment for
    potential confounders.

12
Methods
  • Participants

Included Exclude
1.Recipient age gt18 years 2.single or bilateral lung transplant procedure 3.cystic fibrosis(CF), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), diffuse parenchymal lung disease(DPLD). 1.Donor age lt 12 years 2.Recipient or donor height lt 138 cm or gt 198cm 3.BMI lt13 or gt40 kg/m2 4.Unknown height or weight 5.Use mechanical ventilation
13
Methods
  • BMI

BMI
lt18.5 Underweight
18.524.9 Normal weight
2529.9 Overweight
gt30 Obese
14
Methods
  • The lung allocation score (LAS) was calculated
    using data obtained at the time of
    transplantation.
  • The primary outcome was recipient survival,
    calculated as the number of days from the date of
    transplantation to the date of death.
  • They estimated odds ratios for early death (at 1
    yr) and late death (at 5 yr conditional on 1-yr
    survival)

15
Result
Median age 54 years
Median LAS 32.8
3,671 single- 2,307 double-
16
Result
Medium survival time 4.8 years
17
Result
18
Discussion-Obesity
odds of death
obese recipients
40
1 year after LTs
  • Higher risk of death due to respiratory failure
    among obese recipients.
  • A risk of death obese gt overweight

19
Discussion-Underweight
  • Underweight was associated with a higher risk of
    death after transplantation.
  • The greater risk of infection in underweight
    transplant recipients.

early mortality
older population
COPD
risk of death
late mortality
younger recipients
CF
20
Discussion-Clinical Implication
  • At the extremes of BMI may be at particularly
    high risk of early or late death after
    transplantation.

corticosteroid withdrawal and avoidance Nutritiona
l counseling dietary modification bariatric
surgery pulmonary rehabilitation
Promote long survival
21
Conclusion
underweight
Obesity
Risk of death
12 of deaths in the first year
  • Primary care providers and pulmonologists should
    promote a healthy weight for patients with lung
    disease long before transplantation is considered.

22
Literature(3)
  • The impact of recipient body mass index on
    survival after lung transplantation

23
Background
  • Few studies have examined recipient weight and
    outcomes after Lung transplant (LTx). The United
    Network for Organ Sharing(UNOS) database provides
    an opportunity to examine outcomes related to
    body mass index (BMI) in a large cohort of LTx
    patients.

24
Methods
  • Data source
  • The UNOS data set was retrospectively
    reviewed for 11,411
  • adult primary LTx patients
  • (1998 to 2008)

25
Methods
  • BMI

BMI
lt18.5 Underweight
18.524.9 Normal weight
2529.9 Overweight
gt30 Obese
26
Methods
  • The primary end point all-cause mortality.
  • Secondary outcomes rejection episodes in the
    first year and short-term mortality were also
    examined.

27
Result
  • Figure 1 Number of lung transplants performed
    during the study period, stratified by body mass
    index categories

28
Result
  • Figure 2 Kaplan-Meier estimates of survival for
    lung transplant recipients stratified by body
    mass index categories.

29
Result
30
Discussion
  • The increase in mortality risk was 15 for obese
    patients and 14 for underweight patients.
  • The absolute decrease in 5-year survival was 3.0
    for overweight recipients, 6.1 for obese
    recipients and 2.7 for underweight recipients.

31
Discussion
  • The increase in mortality for overweight and
    obese recipients was present as early as 30 days
    after LTx and persisted though all follow-up
    times examined.
  • This argues strongly that the negative effect of
    overweight or obese BMI manifests early after LTx.

32
Conclusion
  • Underweight, overweight, and obese recipients
    have decreased survival compared with normal
    weight recipients.
  • For overweight and obese recipients, this
    survival difference is demonstrable as early as
    30 days after LTx.
  • Underweight recipients do not manifest survival
    differences until 1 year after LTx.

33
Summary
  • Obesity
  • Overweight
  • Underweight
  • Suggest BMI of lung transplant
  • normal BMI 18.524.9

survival
risk of mortality
34
Thanks for your attention
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