Abstract

The hypermetabolism that occurs after large burns leads to muscle wasting that can result in weakness, difficulty fighting infections, and other challenges to healing. Overall, rates of muscle wasting are not well established across burn centers. The Burn Care Quality Platform (BCQP), the largest available dataset on burn patients globally, was used to explore the rate of Muscle Wasting using data collected from more than 100 burn centers. "Muscle Wasting" was defined from relevant ICD codes (sarcopenia, muscle cachexia, protein malnutrition). Binomial and logistic regression were used to analyze the role of Muscle Wasting in burn mortality and other outcomes after controlling for demographic and comorbid characteristics. In total, the BCQP provided data from 84,438 adult and pediatric burn patients injured between 2000-2018. Only 2.6% (N=2,159) of the patients in the BCQP were diagnosed with having Muscle Wasting at some point during their admission. While Muscle Wasting was not associated with a statistically significant impact on mortality, it remained an independent predictor of inability to discharge to independent living, longer inpatient days, as well as an average of 10 additional surgical procedures (P<0.001 for all) as compared to patients who did not have Muscle Wasting. Muscle Wasting is an independent risk factor for several adverse outcomes in burn patients, but not mortality in the BCQP. Confidence in these findings would be improved with more accurate data collection, as the diagnosis of Muscle Wasting is likely under-reported, under-diagnosed, or both.

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