A comparison of the malnutrition screening tools, MUST, MNA and bioelectrical impedance assessment in frail older hospital patients

Slee, Adrian, Birch, Deborah and Stokoe, David (2015) A comparison of the malnutrition screening tools, MUST, MNA and bioelectrical impedance assessment in frail older hospital patients. Clinical Nutrition, 34 (2). pp. 296-301. ISSN 0261-5614

Documents
A comparison of the malnutrition screening tools, MUST, MNA and bioelectrical impedance assessment in frail older hospital patients
In Press, Corrected Proof
[img]
[Download]
[img]
Preview
PDF
__ddat02_staffhome_jpartridge_1-s2.0-S0261561414001216-main.pdf - Whole Document

670kB
Item Type:Article
Item Status:Live Archive

Abstract

Summary

Background & aims

This cohort study aimed to investigate and compare the ability to predict malnutrition in a group of frail older hospital patients in the United Kingdom using the nutritional risk screening tools, MUST (malnutrition universal screening tool), MNA-SF® (mini nutritional assessment-short form) and bioelectrical impedance assessment (BIA) of body composition.

Methods

MUST and MNA-SF was performed on 78 patients (49 males and 29 females, age: 82 y ± 7.9, body mass index (BMI): 25.5 kg/m2 ± 5.4), categorised by nutritional risk, and statistical comparison and test reliability performed. BIA was performed in 66 patients and fat free mass (FFM), fat mass (FM) and body cell mass (BCM) and index values (kg/m2) calculated and compared against reference values.

Results

MUST scored 77% patients ‘low risk’, 9% ‘medium risk’ and 14% ‘high risk’, compared to MNA-SF categorisation: 9%, 46% and 45%, respectively (P < 0.000001). Reliability assessment found poor reliability between the screening tools (coefficient, r = 0.4). Significant positive correlations were found between most variables (P < 0.05–<0.001); although females exhibited greater variation. FFM index analysis found 40% of males low/depleted, 21% borderline/at risk with 96% categorised by MNA-SF as either malnourished or at risk (MUST-35%). 29% males had low FM index and all appropriately classified by MNA-SF. 30% females had low FFM index or borderline, MNA-SF screening appropriately categorised 86% (compared to MUST-29%).

Conclusions

This preliminary data may have significant clinical implications and highlights the potential ability of the MNA-SF and BIA to accurately assess malnutrition risk over MUST in frail older hospital patients.

Keywords:malnutrition, frailty, bmjgoldcheck, NotOAChecked
Subjects:B Subjects allied to Medicine > B400 Nutrition
Divisions:College of Social Science > School of Psychology
Related URLs:
ID Code:15942
Deposited On:05 Nov 2014 15:32

Repository Staff Only: item control page