High Parenteral Support Volume Is Associated With Reduced Quality of Life Determined by the Short‐Bowel Syndrome Quality of Life Scale in Nonmalignant Intestinal Failure Patients

Research output: Contribution to journalLetterResearchpeer-review

Standard

High Parenteral Support Volume Is Associated With Reduced Quality of Life Determined by the Short‐Bowel Syndrome Quality of Life Scale in Nonmalignant Intestinal Failure Patients. / Nordsten, Cecilie Bagi; Molsted, Stig; Bangsgaard, Louise; Fuglsang, Kristian A.; Brandt, Christopher F.; Niemann, Mads J.; Jeppesen, Palle B.

In: Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, Vol. 45, No. 5, 01.07.2021, p. 926-932.

Research output: Contribution to journalLetterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nordsten, CB, Molsted, S, Bangsgaard, L, Fuglsang, KA, Brandt, CF, Niemann, MJ & Jeppesen, PB 2021, 'High Parenteral Support Volume Is Associated With Reduced Quality of Life Determined by the Short‐Bowel Syndrome Quality of Life Scale in Nonmalignant Intestinal Failure Patients', Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, vol. 45, no. 5, pp. 926-932. https://doi.org/10.1002/jpen.1958

APA

Nordsten, C. B., Molsted, S., Bangsgaard, L., Fuglsang, K. A., Brandt, C. F., Niemann, M. J., & Jeppesen, P. B. (2021). High Parenteral Support Volume Is Associated With Reduced Quality of Life Determined by the Short‐Bowel Syndrome Quality of Life Scale in Nonmalignant Intestinal Failure Patients. Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 45(5), 926-932. https://doi.org/10.1002/jpen.1958

Vancouver

Nordsten CB, Molsted S, Bangsgaard L, Fuglsang KA, Brandt CF, Niemann MJ et al. High Parenteral Support Volume Is Associated With Reduced Quality of Life Determined by the Short‐Bowel Syndrome Quality of Life Scale in Nonmalignant Intestinal Failure Patients. Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition. 2021 Jul 1;45(5):926-932. https://doi.org/10.1002/jpen.1958

Author

Nordsten, Cecilie Bagi ; Molsted, Stig ; Bangsgaard, Louise ; Fuglsang, Kristian A. ; Brandt, Christopher F. ; Niemann, Mads J. ; Jeppesen, Palle B. / High Parenteral Support Volume Is Associated With Reduced Quality of Life Determined by the Short‐Bowel Syndrome Quality of Life Scale in Nonmalignant Intestinal Failure Patients. In: Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition. 2021 ; Vol. 45, No. 5. pp. 926-932.

Bibtex

@article{5370372187ae4cc7b86a16a4c1b17fc5,
title = "High Parenteral Support Volume Is Associated With Reduced Quality of Life Determined by the Short‐Bowel Syndrome Quality of Life Scale in Nonmalignant Intestinal Failure Patients",
abstract = "BackgroundAim was to investigate the association between quality of life (QoL), bowel anatomy, and the need for home parenteral support (HPS) volume in patients with nonmalignant short-bowel syndrome (SBS) and intestinal failure (IF).MethodsThe SBS-QoL scale was used in a cross-sectional study of 95 nonmalignant SBS-IF patients. Sum QoL scores (0: best, 170: worst) were calculated. Patients were defined as having a small bowel (≤200 cm), and patients with jejunostomy or ileostomy were subclassified based on functional small-bowel length (cm) into 4 anatomy subgroups: 1a–1d (0–49, 50–99, 100–149, 150–200 cm, respectively). Multiple linear regression analyses explored associations between QoL, patient groups, and HPS volume, adjusting for age, sex, body mass index, and education.ResultsComplete data were obtained from 60 patients. HPS volume was associated with a worse SBS-QoL score (L/d, β = 7.91; SE = 3.90; P = .048), but male sex associated with improvement (β = −26.28; SE = 11.06; P = .021). No differences in sum QoL were seen between the benign SBS-IF subgroups 1a–d (P = .210). Multivariate regression analyses showed that patients with a small-bowel stoma, a small-bowel length <50 cm was associated with a significantly worse/higher SBS-QoL score compared with a length >50 cm.ConclusionIn patients with benign SBS-IF, high HPS volume was associated with poor QoL. Also, jejunostomy or ileostomy with small-bowel length <50 cm was associated with impaired QoL. These findings support rehabilitation strategies that reduce fecal losses and decrease HPS needs.",
author = "Nordsten, {Cecilie Bagi} and Stig Molsted and Louise Bangsgaard and Fuglsang, {Kristian A.} and Brandt, {Christopher F.} and Niemann, {Mads J.} and Jeppesen, {Palle B.}",
year = "2021",
month = jul,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1002/jpen.1958",
language = "English",
volume = "45",
pages = "926--932",
journal = "Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition",
issn = "0148-6071",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - High Parenteral Support Volume Is Associated With Reduced Quality of Life Determined by the Short‐Bowel Syndrome Quality of Life Scale in Nonmalignant Intestinal Failure Patients

AU - Nordsten, Cecilie Bagi

AU - Molsted, Stig

AU - Bangsgaard, Louise

AU - Fuglsang, Kristian A.

AU - Brandt, Christopher F.

AU - Niemann, Mads J.

AU - Jeppesen, Palle B.

PY - 2021/7/1

Y1 - 2021/7/1

N2 - BackgroundAim was to investigate the association between quality of life (QoL), bowel anatomy, and the need for home parenteral support (HPS) volume in patients with nonmalignant short-bowel syndrome (SBS) and intestinal failure (IF).MethodsThe SBS-QoL scale was used in a cross-sectional study of 95 nonmalignant SBS-IF patients. Sum QoL scores (0: best, 170: worst) were calculated. Patients were defined as having a small bowel (≤200 cm), and patients with jejunostomy or ileostomy were subclassified based on functional small-bowel length (cm) into 4 anatomy subgroups: 1a–1d (0–49, 50–99, 100–149, 150–200 cm, respectively). Multiple linear regression analyses explored associations between QoL, patient groups, and HPS volume, adjusting for age, sex, body mass index, and education.ResultsComplete data were obtained from 60 patients. HPS volume was associated with a worse SBS-QoL score (L/d, β = 7.91; SE = 3.90; P = .048), but male sex associated with improvement (β = −26.28; SE = 11.06; P = .021). No differences in sum QoL were seen between the benign SBS-IF subgroups 1a–d (P = .210). Multivariate regression analyses showed that patients with a small-bowel stoma, a small-bowel length <50 cm was associated with a significantly worse/higher SBS-QoL score compared with a length >50 cm.ConclusionIn patients with benign SBS-IF, high HPS volume was associated with poor QoL. Also, jejunostomy or ileostomy with small-bowel length <50 cm was associated with impaired QoL. These findings support rehabilitation strategies that reduce fecal losses and decrease HPS needs.

AB - BackgroundAim was to investigate the association between quality of life (QoL), bowel anatomy, and the need for home parenteral support (HPS) volume in patients with nonmalignant short-bowel syndrome (SBS) and intestinal failure (IF).MethodsThe SBS-QoL scale was used in a cross-sectional study of 95 nonmalignant SBS-IF patients. Sum QoL scores (0: best, 170: worst) were calculated. Patients were defined as having a small bowel (≤200 cm), and patients with jejunostomy or ileostomy were subclassified based on functional small-bowel length (cm) into 4 anatomy subgroups: 1a–1d (0–49, 50–99, 100–149, 150–200 cm, respectively). Multiple linear regression analyses explored associations between QoL, patient groups, and HPS volume, adjusting for age, sex, body mass index, and education.ResultsComplete data were obtained from 60 patients. HPS volume was associated with a worse SBS-QoL score (L/d, β = 7.91; SE = 3.90; P = .048), but male sex associated with improvement (β = −26.28; SE = 11.06; P = .021). No differences in sum QoL were seen between the benign SBS-IF subgroups 1a–d (P = .210). Multivariate regression analyses showed that patients with a small-bowel stoma, a small-bowel length <50 cm was associated with a significantly worse/higher SBS-QoL score compared with a length >50 cm.ConclusionIn patients with benign SBS-IF, high HPS volume was associated with poor QoL. Also, jejunostomy or ileostomy with small-bowel length <50 cm was associated with impaired QoL. These findings support rehabilitation strategies that reduce fecal losses and decrease HPS needs.

U2 - 10.1002/jpen.1958

DO - 10.1002/jpen.1958

M3 - Letter

C2 - 32613614

VL - 45

SP - 926

EP - 932

JO - Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition

JF - Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition

SN - 0148-6071

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 284188994