Original Article
J Frailty Sarcopenia Falls 2023 Mar; 8(1):38-43 Copied!
10.22540/JFSF-08-038 Copied!
Sarcopenia: An Assessment into the Prevalence and Disease Burden in Chronic Pancreatitis Patients
- Leicester Medical School, Lancaster Rd, Leicester, United Kingdom
- Leicester HPB Unit, University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust, United Kingdom
- Department of Cardiovascular sciences, University of Leicester, United Kingdom
- Gastrointestinal Imaging Group, Department of Radiology, University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust, Leicester General Hospital, United Kingdom
- * Equal contribution
Keywords:
Abstract Objectives To evaluate the prevalence of sarcopenia in patients referred to a Multidisciplinary Chronic Pancreatitis (CP) Clinic at the University Hospitals of Leicester. Methods All patients who had undergone CT scans were identified. Controls were identified from CT colonograms with no features of malignancy or pancreatic pathology. The psoas muscle index (PMI) was calculated using the formula: total psoas muscle cross-sectional area at the third lumbar vertebral level (cm2)/ the patient’s height squared (m2). PMI cut-offs were <6.31cm2/m2 and <3.91cm2/m2 for males and females, respectively. Results 58 CP CT scans were available for analysis along with 62 control scans. 71.9% of CP patients had a PMI below the cut-off for their gender, compared to 45.2% of the controls. The mean PMI (±SD) for male CP patients and male controls were 5.54cm2/m2 (±1.60) and 6.73 cm2/m2 (±1.54), (P=0.0023). The mean PMI (±SD) for female CP patients and female controls were 3.82 cm2/m2 (+/-1.46) and 4.98 cm2/m2 (+/-1.43), (P=0.0021). Conclusions CP patients had a mean PMI below the cut-off value, suggesting that CP patients are largely sarcopenic. As malnutrition is a significant feature of CP, optimisation of nutrition may help to ameliorate sarcopenia in CP patients.