Abstract

A decrease in skeletal muscle mass has been shown to increase hospital mortality. Nevertheless, little is known about the association between progressive muscle loss over time and clinical outcomes. We aimed to evaluate whether progressive loss of muscle mass in septic shock patients was associated with mortality. We reviewed prospectively enrolled registry of septic shock which had 817 consecutive patients. Of these, 175 patients who had computed tomography (CT) at a time of admission as well as 3–6 months prior to admission were included. Between these two CTs, the change in total abdominal muscle area index (TAMAI) was evaluated for progressive muscle loss. The change in TAMAI was higher in the non-survivors (−7.6 cm2/m2, 19.0% decrease) than the survivors (−4.0 cm2/m2, 10.5% decrease) with statistical significance (p = 0.002). Multiple logistic regression showed that the patients who had more than a 6.4 cm2/m2 (16.7%) reduction of TAMAI had a 4.42-fold higher risk for mortality at 28 days (OR, 4.42; 95% CI, 1.41–13.81, p = 0.011). Our study suggested that progressive loss of muscle mass might be a useful prognostic factor for septic shock patients. This implication will need to be further explored in future prospective studies.

Highlights

  • A decrease in skeletal muscle mass has been shown to increase hospital mortality

  • There was no significant multicollinearity. These results suggested that progressive muscle loss can be used as a prognostic factor to predict 28-day mortality, as illustrated in the representative cases (Fig. 4)

  • We found that the progressive loss of skeletal muscle is an adverse prognostic factor for 28-day mortality in septic shock patients

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Summary

Introduction

A decrease in skeletal muscle mass has been shown to increase hospital mortality. little is known about the association between progressive muscle loss over time and clinical outcomes. 175 patients who had computed tomography (CT) at a time of admission as well as 3–6 months prior to admission were included Between these two CTs, the change in total abdominal muscle area index (TAMAI) was evaluated for progressive muscle loss. Our study suggested that progressive loss of muscle mass might be a useful prognostic factor for septic shock patients. A recent study showed an association of muscle mass loss and increased mortality in elderly sepsis patients[8]. Previous studies analyzed muscle mass using only values at a specific time point From this perspective, we aim to determine the prognostic value of progressive loss of muscle mass in predicting 28-day mortality outcome in patients with septic shock, using a single-center, observational, prospectively-collected registry

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