Routine hospital tool found to predict poor outcomes after liver transplant
Cedars-Sinai Aug 15, 2017
Findings of research led by Cedars–Sinai may help pinpoint liver transplant recipients at risk for early disability and prolonged hospitalization.
A routinely used hospital tool can predict which liver transplant recipients are more likely to do poorly after surgery, according to a study led by Cedars–Sinai. The findings could help doctors identify which patients should receive physical therapy or other targeted interventions to improve their recovery.
The multicenter study, led by principal investigator Vinay Sundaram, MD, uncovered an important new use for a nursing assessment known as the Braden Scale, which is performed for all hospitalized patients as per Medicare and Medicaid requirements. The Braden Scale aims to evaluate whether newly admitted patients need extra care to avoid developing or worsening pressure ulcers, or bedsores. The scale rates patients based on their activity level, mobility, nutrition and other measures of frailty. A low score is associated with greater frailty and increased risk of bedsores.
The investigators reviewed 341 medical records of liver transplant patients at Cedars–Sinai and the Oregon Health and Science University in Portland. They found that liver transplant patients with lower Braden Scale scores were more likely to be nonambulatory at discharge, discharged to a rehabilitation facility and have longer hospital stays compared with transplant patients with higher scores.
The study, published in the journal Liver Transplantation, addresses a pressing clinical need, according to Sundaram, assistant medical director of Liver Transplantation at Cedars–Sinai.
"With medical advances in recent decades, liver transplant patients are living longer than ever," Sundaram said. "So doctors are rightly turning their attention to improving quality of life. The problem is that we have no good way to measure how well these patients will do. Our findings provide a way to achieve that so that we can take preventive action."
Specifically, the investigators suggested that patients with low Braden Scale scores be put on supervised exercise programs soon after their transplants. "These programs could improve physical functioning and, ultimately, quality of life," Sundaram said. Future research with a larger sample size, he added, is needed to evaluate whether the Braden Score can help predict overall survival of liver transplant patients.
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A routinely used hospital tool can predict which liver transplant recipients are more likely to do poorly after surgery, according to a study led by Cedars–Sinai. The findings could help doctors identify which patients should receive physical therapy or other targeted interventions to improve their recovery.
The multicenter study, led by principal investigator Vinay Sundaram, MD, uncovered an important new use for a nursing assessment known as the Braden Scale, which is performed for all hospitalized patients as per Medicare and Medicaid requirements. The Braden Scale aims to evaluate whether newly admitted patients need extra care to avoid developing or worsening pressure ulcers, or bedsores. The scale rates patients based on their activity level, mobility, nutrition and other measures of frailty. A low score is associated with greater frailty and increased risk of bedsores.
The investigators reviewed 341 medical records of liver transplant patients at Cedars–Sinai and the Oregon Health and Science University in Portland. They found that liver transplant patients with lower Braden Scale scores were more likely to be nonambulatory at discharge, discharged to a rehabilitation facility and have longer hospital stays compared with transplant patients with higher scores.
The study, published in the journal Liver Transplantation, addresses a pressing clinical need, according to Sundaram, assistant medical director of Liver Transplantation at Cedars–Sinai.
"With medical advances in recent decades, liver transplant patients are living longer than ever," Sundaram said. "So doctors are rightly turning their attention to improving quality of life. The problem is that we have no good way to measure how well these patients will do. Our findings provide a way to achieve that so that we can take preventive action."
Specifically, the investigators suggested that patients with low Braden Scale scores be put on supervised exercise programs soon after their transplants. "These programs could improve physical functioning and, ultimately, quality of life," Sundaram said. Future research with a larger sample size, he added, is needed to evaluate whether the Braden Score can help predict overall survival of liver transplant patients.
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