Total body water/fat-free mass ratio as a valuable predictive parameter for mortality in maintenance hemodialysis patients

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Abstract

Hydration of fat-free mass (FFM), defined as the ratio of total body water (TBW) to FFM (TBW/FFM), is stable at 0.739 in adult mammals. However, an increase in the TBW/FFM ratio is common in hemodialysis (HD) patients. This study aimed to evaluate the determinants of TBW/FFM and investigate its predictive value for the prognosis of all-cause mortality in HD patients. We enrolled patients undergoing maintenance HD between July 2020 and May 2021. All patients were prospectively followed until death, HD dropout, or until the end of the study (November 1, 2021). A forward stepwise multivariable linear regression analyses was performed to test the independent relationship between TBW/FMM and other clinical variables. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was used to discriminate the TBW/FFM with respect to 180-day mortality. Of the 106 patients, 42 had elevated TBW/FFM levels. Multiple linear regression analysis revealed that the TBW/FFM ratio was significantly associated with extracellular water (ECW)/TBW (standardized regression coefficient [β = 1.131, P

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Liu, S., Yang, Y., Song, J., Ma, L., Wang, Y., Mei, Q., & Jiang, W. (2022). Total body water/fat-free mass ratio as a valuable predictive parameter for mortality in maintenance hemodialysis patients. Medicine (United States), 101(31), E29904. https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000029904

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