Validity of the adductor pollicis muscle as a component of nutritional screening in the hospital setting: A systematic review

Clinical Nutrition ESPEN
Charles Chin Han LewMichelle D Miller

Abstract

The thickness of the adductor pollicis muscle (TAPM) is the only muscle that can be directly measured with a caliper. Recent studies demonstrate that the TAPM could be used as part of nutritional screening, but this has not been systematically reviewed. We aimed to review the validity and reliability of TAPM in identifying malnutrition risk. PubMed, CINAHL and Scopus were systematically searched. Eligible studies were cross-sectional, case-control or cohort studies which recruited adult patients in the hospital, measured the TAPM along with a valid nutritional assessment tool and evaluated the validity of TAPM with univariate, multivariate, discriminative and/or agreement statistics. The Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies-II was used to evaluate the risk-of-bias. Nine out of 39 studies identified were eligible, and all had some risk-of-bias. Subjective Global Assessment (SGA) was used as the criterion standard in all nine studies. The TAPM amongst malnourished patients were significantly different from their counterparts but this may be over-estimated since all measurements of the SGA and TAPM were non-blinded. Concordance between the TAPM and SGA ranged from poor to good (kappa ranged from 0.04 to 0.25; specific...Continue Reading

Citations

Aug 3, 2018·Nutrition in Clinical Practice : Official Publication of the American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition·Thainá Gattermann PereiraFlávia Moraes Silva
Dec 6, 2018·Revista brasileira de enfermagem·Priscila Moreira de Lima PereiraAna Paula Carlos Cândido
Oct 21, 2020·BMC Cancer·Ana Beatriz RechinelliValdete Regina Guandalini
Mar 4, 2021·Nutrición hospitalaria·Talita Yoshimura da CostaMaria Claudia Bernardes Spexoto

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