Negative association of hemoglobin levels with mortality in older Japanese patients with dysphagia: a retrospective cohort study
Ya-Ting Yuan, Miao Wang, Xian-Zhi Liu, Xiao Cheng, Xue-Ying Cai, Han-Han Chen, Xiao-Bin Zhang

TL;DR
Higher hemoglobin levels in older Japanese patients with swallowing difficulties are linked to lower risk of death.
Contribution
Demonstrates a strong inverse association between hemoglobin levels and mortality in older patients with dysphagia.
Findings
Each 1 g/dL increase in hemoglobin reduced mortality risk by 14% after adjusting for covariates.
Patients in the highest hemoglobin tertile had over twice the median survival of those in the lowest tertile.
Subgroup analyses confirmed consistent results without significant interactions.
Abstract
This secondary analysis aimed to examine the association between hemoglobin levels and mortality in older Japanese individuals with dysphagia. Data from 253 patients with clinically confirmed dysphagia between January 2014 and January 2017 were analyzed. Participants were divided into three tertiles based on their hemoglobin levels (T1: 5.4–10.2 g/dL; T2: 10.2–12.0 g/dL; T3: ≥12.0 g/dL). Cox proportional hazards regression was used to evaluate mortality risk, supplemented by Kaplan–Meier survival analysis and subgroup interaction assessments. The study included 154 female and 99 male patients, with a median age of 83 years. The cohort demonstrated a significant inverse relationship between hemoglobin levels and mortality. After full covariate adjustment, each 1 g/dL increase in hemoglobin level corresponded to a 14% mortality risk reduction (HR = 0.86, 95% CI: 0.77–0.97, P = 0.013).…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDysphagia Assessment and Management · Esophageal and GI Pathology · Child Nutrition and Feeding Issues
