Increased BMI favors weaning in patients with chronic intestinal failure due to short bowel syndrome: a retrospective cohort study in Italy
Fabio Dario Merlo, Palle Bekker Jeppesen, Umberto Aimasso, Fabio Bioletto, Marta Ossola, Valentina Ponzo, Ilaria Goitre, Marta Palermo, Elisa Olimpio, Stefano Silveri, Simona Bo

TL;DR
Higher BMI and better body composition improve chances of weaning from parenteral nutrition in patients with short bowel syndrome.
Contribution
Identifies BMI and body composition as predictors of weaning success in short bowel syndrome patients.
Findings
Patients with higher BMI at parenteral support initiation were more likely to be weaned.
Increased intracellular water and muscle mass index were associated with successful weaning.
Type 3 short bowel syndrome was strongly linked to weaning success in multivariable analysis.
Abstract
A great heterogeneity exists among patients with chronic intestinal failure even with the same intestinal circuit. Weaning from parenteral support depends on intestinal adaptation, remnant bowel length, and functional capacity. The present study aimed to assess if pre-existent nutritional reserves would predict the possibility of enteral autonomy. This retrospective observational study evaluated the incidence of weaning off parenteral support in adult patients with chronic intestinal failure due to short bowel syndrome from an Italian referral center. Multivariable models, considering mortality as a competing risk, identified predictors of weaning. Out of 251 patients, 116 (46.2%) died without being weaned and 76 (30.3%) were weaned off. The latter showed increased residual small bowel length, more frequently the colon-in-continuity and the ileocecal valve, lower age, higher weight…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClinical Nutrition and Gastroenterology · Gastrointestinal motility and disorders · Nutrition and Health in Aging
