Published online Jul 28, 2019. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v25.i28.3823
Peer-review started: March 18, 2019
First decision: May 16, 2019
Revised: June 17, 2019
Accepted: July 1, 2019
Article in press: July 3, 2019
Published online: July 28, 2019
Processing time: 134 Days and 7.5 Hours
Malnutrition is prevalent in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Multiple nutrition screening (NST) and assessment tools (NAT) have been developed for general populations, but the evidence in patients with IBD remains unclear.
To systematically review the prevalence of abnormalities on NSTs and NATs, whether NSTs are associated with NATs, and whether they predict clinical outcomes in patients with IBD.
Comprehensive searches performed in Medline, CINAHL Plus and PubMed. Included: English language studies correlating NSTs with NATs or NSTs/NATs with clinical outcomes in IBD. Excluded: Review articles/case studies; use of body mass index/laboratory values as sole NST/NAT; age < 16.
Of 16 studies and 1618 patients were included, 72% Crohn’s disease and 28% ulcerative colitis. Four NSTs (the Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool, Malnutrition Inflammation Risk Tool (MIRT), Saskatchewan Inflammatory Bowel Disease Nutrition Risk Tool (SaskIBD-NRT) and Nutrition Risk Screening 2002 (NRS-2002) were significantly associated with nutritional assessment measures of sarcopenia and the Subjective Global Assessment (SGA). Three NSTs (MIRT, NRS-2002 and Nutritional Risk Index) were associated with clinical outcomes including hospitalizations, need for surgery, disease flares, and length of stay (LOS). Sarcopenia was the most commonly evaluated NAT associated with outcomes including the need for surgery and post-operative complications. The SGA was not associated with clinical outcomes aside from LOS.
There is limited evidence correlating NSTs, NATs and clinical outcomes in IBD. Although studies support the association of NSTs/NATs with relevant outcomes, the heterogeneity calls for further studies before an optimal tool can be recommended. The NRS-2002, measures of sarcopenia and developments of novel NSTs/NATs, such as the MIRT, represent key, clinically-relevant areas for future exploration.
Core tip: Malnutrition is highly prevalent amongst patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and negatively impacts various clinical outcomes. This review highlights the Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool, Malnutrition Inflammation Risk Tool, Saskatchewan Inflammatory Bowel Disease Nutrition Risk Tool, Nutrition Risk Screening 2002 and cross-sectional imaging assessments of sarcopenia as promising nutrition screening and assessment tools in IBD. By becoming familiar with and consistently applying these tools we can move towards early recognition, diagnosis and management of malnutrition in clinical practice. Further research will elucidate the optimal tools and the impact of their integration into routine practice on clinical outcomes in IBD.