Introduction: Oncohematological diseases are associated with a high prevalence of malnutrition during hospitalization. Our aim was to analyze the appearance and repercussions of malnutrition in well-nourished hematological inpatients at admission. Method: A prospective one-year study conducted in hematology inpatients. The Malnutrition Screening Tool (MST) was used at admission and repeated weekly. Patients with a negative screening at admission who developed malnutrition during hospitalization constituted our study sample. A nutritional evaluation and intervention was performed. We also analyzed the effect of newly diagnosed malnutrition on patients’ outcomes in comparison with the outcomes of patients that remained well-nourished during hospitalization. Results: Twenty-one percent of hematological inpatients who were well nourished at admission developed malnutrition during hospitalization. Of the patients, 62.4% needed a nutritional intervention (100% oral supplements, 21.4% diet changes, 5.2% parenteral nutrition). After intervention, an increase in real intake was achieved (623 kcal and 27.3 g of protein/day). Weight loss was slowed and visceral protein was stabilized. Length of stay was 8.5 days longer for our sample than for well-nourished patients. Conclusions: Newly diagnosed malnutrition appeared in one in five hematological well-nourished inpatients, leading to a longer length of stay. Nutritional intervention improved intake and nutritional status. Nutritional surveillance should be mandatory.
CITATION STYLE
Ramos-Martínez, T., Villar-Taibo, R., Vidal-Casariego, A., Pintor-De-La-Maza, B., Alejo-Ramos, M., García-Pérez, M. P., … Ballesteros-Pomar, M. D. (2019). The appearance of malnutrition in hematological inpatients prolongs hospital stay: The need for nutritional surveillance during hospitalization. Nutricion Hospitalaria, 36(2), 372–378. https://doi.org/10.20960/nh.2226
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