Prognostic Impact of Serum Transthyretin and Sarcopenia on 3-Year Mortality and Respiratory-Related Hospitalizations in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis: A Prospective Cohort Study.

Prognostic markers reflecting nutritional vulnerability in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) remain poorly defined.

In this prospective cohort study, 63 stable outpatients with IPF were followed for 3 years. Sarcopenia was defined according to the 2019 Asian Working Group for Sarcopenia criteria. Serum transthyretin levels were measured concurrently. Cox proportional hazards regression, binary logistic regression, and Kaplan-Meier survival analyses were performed.

During follow-up, 18 patients (29%) died and 21 (33%) experienced respiratory-related hospitalization. Serum transthyretin was an independent predictor of both 3-year mortality and respiratory-related hospitalization, even after adjusting for the Gender-Age-Physiology index. Conversely, sarcopenia and low appendicular skeletal muscle mass index (ASMI) were not independently associated with either outcome. Kaplan-Meier analysis demonstrated significant differences in both mortality and hospitalization according to serum transthyretin levels. Low ASMI evaluated using sex-specific cutoffs was associated with higher mortality in the unadjusted analysis, but not with hospitalization; sarcopenia was not significantly associated with either endpoint.

Serum transthyretin may serve as a practical biomarker of nutritional vulnerability, providing complementary prognostic information beyond muscle mass-based assessment in IPF.
Chronic respiratory disease
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Authors

Okada Okada, Nakano Nakano, Fujita Fujita, Inoue Inoue, Ito Ito, Hashiba Hashiba, Fujikawa Fujikawa, Tanaka Tanaka, Mukai Mukai, Ito Ito, Mori Mori, Fukumitsu Fukumitsu, Fukuda Fukuda, Kanemitsu Kanemitsu, Tajiri Tajiri, Oguri Oguri, Ozawa Ozawa, Murase Murase, Ohkubo Ohkubo
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