Malnutrition combined with obesity significantly increased the risk of composite adverse events by 2.25-fold compared to non-malnourished obese patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention.
Observational (n=631)
Yes
Does combining the CONUT score with BMI refine the prognostic interpretation of the obesity paradox in patients undergoing PCI?
Effect estimate: HR 2.25 (95% CI 1.01-5.00)
Absolute Event Rate: 25.5% vs 6.5%
p-value: p=0.047
The "obesity paradox" suggests better outcomes in overweight cardiovascular patients, yet the prognostic role of poor nutritional status-even in obese individuals-remains unclear. We evaluated whether combining body mass index (BMI) with the Controlling Nutritional Status (CONUT) score refines interpretation of the obesity-paradox signal in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).
Sumida et al. (Mon,) conducted a observational in Coronary artery disease (n=631). Malnutrition combined with obesity (CONUT score ≥ 2 and BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2) vs. Non-malnourished, obese patients (CONUT score 0-1 and BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2) was evaluated on Composite of all-cause death, non-fatal myocardial infarction, stent thrombosis, heart-failure hospitalization, major bleeding, stroke, and venous thromboembolism (HR 2.25, 95% CI 1.01-5.00, p=0.047). Malnutrition combined with obesity significantly increased the risk of composite adverse events by 2.25-fold compared to non-malnourished obese patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention.