4.5 Article

Feasibility of bioelectrical impedance analysis in routine clinical care to assess body composition in geriatric rehabilitation inpatients: RESORT

Journal

AGING CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 35, Issue 2, Pages 293-302

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s40520-022-02320-8

Keywords

Sarcopenia; Body composition; Impedance; Feasibility; Aged

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This study evaluates the feasibility of using bioelectric impedance analysis (BIA) to measure muscle mass in geriatric rehabilitation inpatients. The results show that BIA is feasible in this population but needs to address technical and refusal issues.
Background Sarcopenia is prevalent in 20-50% of geriatric rehabilitation inpatients, but it is often undiagnosed.Aims The aim of the study is to evaluate the feasibility of bioelectric impedance analysis (BIA) to measure muscle mass in routine clinical care in a cohort of geriatric rehabilitation inpatients.Methods REStORing Health of acutely unwell adulTs (RESORT) is an observational, longitudinal inception cohort of geriatric rehabilitation inpatients. BIA was implemented at admission and discharge as routine care performed by nursing staff. BIA feasibility was defined as completion rate (low <= 25%, moderate > 25-<= 50%, good > 50- <= 75%, excellent > 75%), reasons for non-completion and need for remeasurement. Clinical characteristics associated with BIA completion and remeasurements were assessed.Results Patients (n = 1890, 56% females) had a median age of 83.4 years (interquartile range: [77.6-88.4]). Of the total cohort, 5.7% had a contraindication (pacemaker/other electronic medical device) for BIA at admission and 4.5% at discharge. BIA was completed in 77.1% of patients eligible for BIA at admission and 63.2% at discharge indicating good feasibility; remeasurement was required in 7.4 and 6.9%, respectively; 5.9% had a medical reason preventing BIA completion at admission and 3.7% at discharge. Refusal and technical issues occurred in 1.6 and 0.7% at admission and 2.1 and 1.8% at discharge. Reason for non-completion was unknown/missing in 14.7% at admission and 28.6% at discharge. Worse functional and physical performance was associated with BIA non-completion and remeasurement.Conclusions BIA in routine clinical care in geriatric rehabilitation inpatients is feasible; completion rates may be enhanced further by reviewing barriers and enablers.

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