Abstract

To determine the relationship between prealbumin level and activities of daily living (ADL) at discharge in patients with heart failure (HF) and assess the usefulness of prealbumin measurement in predicting discharge Barthel Index (BI) in older patients with HF who become non-independent in ADL after hospital admission. Patients with HF, aged ≥75 years, who were admitted to an acute hospital and underwent acute and early recovery cardiac rehabilitation (CR) were studied retrospectively. The exclusion criteria were non-independent ADL before admission (BI < 85 points) and independent ADL at the start of CR (BI ≥ 85 points). The usefulness of prealbumin level in predicting discharge BI was compared between four models. Albumin and Controlling Nutritional Status (CONUT) were used as comparison variables. The models and independent variables were model 1 (covariates only), model 2 (prealbumin + covariates), model 3 (albumin + covariates), and model 4 (CONUT score + covariates). Adjusted R2, a measure of model fit, was used to compare predictive ability. A total of 152 patients were included in the analysis. Prealbumin level was a significant variable for BI at discharge but not albumin or CONUT. The adjusted R2 was higher in model 2 with the addition of prealbumin than that in model 1 (0.362 vs. 0.347). Prealbumin levels are useful in predicting discharge BI in older patients with HF who become non-independent in ADL after hospitalization.

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