Serum levels of albumin and prealbumin are invalid as biomarkers for malnutrition during surgical inflammation due to hepatic reprioritization of visceral protein synthesis.
Preoperative malnutrition
Serum albumin and prealbumin
Preoperative risk stratification has long been developed as a strategy to predict postoperative outcomes and potentially alter or optimize comorbidities and modifiable risk. Malnutrition is among the most common potentially modifiable risk factors and the strongest predictor of poor postsurgical outcomes. Historically, malnutrition has been difficult to address for healthcare providers because of the lack of a cohesive definition. Adding to the confusion has been the use of serum levels of albumin and prealbumin as biomarkers for malnutrition; many fail to understand that these visceral proteins are only valid as markers of nutrition status while at homeostasis. Surgical need is often driven by both sterile and non-sterile inflammation, but during this pathologic mechanism, hepatic reprioritization shunts visceral protein synthesis, rendering albumin and prealbumin invalid as biomarkers for malnutrition. Ultimately, understanding these limitations and embracing better indicators of malnutrition will improve preoperative risk stratification.
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Tyler J. Loftus
University of Florida
Michelle Brown
The University of Melbourne
John Slish
Nutrition in Clinical Practice
University of Florida
Florida College
Food and Nutrition Service
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Loftus et al. (Mon,) conducted a review in Preoperative malnutrition. Serum albumin and prealbumin was evaluated. Serum levels of albumin and prealbumin are invalid as biomarkers for malnutrition during surgical inflammation due to hepatic reprioritization of visceral protein synthesis.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0e542255003e511e78d658 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/ncp.10271
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