6533b83afe1ef96bd12a70ac

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Validity, efficacy and reliability of 3 nutritional screening tools regarding the nutritional assessment in different social and health areas.

Silvia Veses MartinJuana Cantero LlorcaCristina Barrios MartaAntonio Hernández-mijaresCelia BañulsIciar Castro-vega

subject

0301 basic medicineDiagnostic Screening Programsmedicine.medical_specialtyHospitalized patientsNutritional StatusSensitivity and SpecificitySampling Studies03 medical and health sciencesOutpatientsScreening methodPrevalenceMedicineHumansScreening toolNutritional riskReliability (statistics)AgedAged 80 and overInpatients030109 nutrition & dieteticsbusiness.industryGold standardMalnutritionInstitutionalizationReproducibility of ResultsMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseNutrition SurveysMalnutritionCross-Sectional StudiesNutrition AssessmentROC CurveFamily medicineArea Under Curvebusiness

description

Abstract Introduction and objective Nutritional screening allows for the detection of nutritional risk. Validated tools should be implemented, and their usefulness should be contrasted with a gold standard. The aim of this study is to discover the validity, efficacy and reliability of 3 nutritional screening tools in relation to complete nutritional assessment. Material and methodology A sub-analysis of a cross-sectional and descriptive study on the prevalence of disease-related malnutrition. The sample was selected from outpatients, hospitalized and institutionalized patients. MUST, MNAsf and MST screening were employed. A nutritional assessment of all the patients was undertaken. The SENPE-SEDOM consensus was used for the diagnosis. Results In the outpatients, both MUST and MNAsf have a similar validity in relation to the nutritional assessment (AUC 0.871 and 0.883, respectively). In the institutionalized patients, the MUST screening method is the one that shows the greatest validity (AUC 0.815), whereas in the hospitalized patients, the most valid methods are both MUST and MST (AUC 0.868 and 0.853, respectively). Conclusions It is essential to use nutritional screening to invest the available resources wisely. Based on our results, MUST is the most suitable screening method in hospitalized and institutionalized patients.

10.1016/j.medcli.2017.07.019https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28947299