Nutritional Support in Malnourished Outpatients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD): A Randomized Controlled Pilot Study
Valerie Conway, Craig Hukins, Stacey Sharp, Peter F. Collins

TL;DR
This study shows that nutritional support improves health and quality of life for COPD patients who are malnourished, but success depends on how the support is provided.
Contribution
The study introduces powdered oral nutritional supplements combined with counseling as a novel approach for managing COPD-related malnutrition.
Findings
Nutritional support significantly improved protein intake, weight, and quality of life in malnourished COPD patients.
Adherence to oral nutritional supplements was linked to greater weight gain, though not statistically significant.
Only about half of participants reported consuming the supplements by week 12.
Abstract
(1) Background: The evidence for nutritional support in COPD is almost entirely based on ready-to-drink oral nutritional supplements (ONSs). This study aimed to explore the effectiveness of powdered ONSs alongside individualized dietary counseling in the management of malnutrition. (2) Methods: Malnourished outpatients with COPD were randomized to receive either routine care (Group A: counseling + recommended to purchase powdered ONSs) or an enhanced intervention (Group B: counseling + provision of powdered ONSs at no cost to the patient) for 12 weeks. Outcomes of interest were nutritional intake, weight status, and quality of life. (3) Results: A total of 33 outpatients were included, categorized as follows: Group A (n = 21); Group B (n = 12); severely malnourished (n = 9), moderately malnourished (n = 24), mean BMI 18.0 SD 2.5 kg/m2. No differences were observed between groups at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Research · Nutrition and Health in Aging · Pediatric health and respiratory diseases
