The Diversity of Nutritional Status in Cancer: New Insights

被引:71
作者
Chaves, Mariana Ramos [1 ]
Boleo-Tome, Carolina [1 ]
Monteiro-Grillo, Isabel [1 ,2 ]
Camilo, Maria [1 ]
Ravasco, Paula [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lisbon, Inst Mol Med, Unidade Nutr & Metab, Fac Med, P-1699 Lisbon, Portugal
[2] Hosp Univ Santa Maria, Serv Radioterapia, Lisbon, Portugal
关键词
Cancer; Histological aggressiveness; Nutritional status; Body mass index; Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment; BODY-MASS INDEX; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; BREAST-CANCER; CONTROLLED-TRIAL; WEIGHT-LOSS; OBESITY; OUTCOMES; PROGNOSIS; CHEMOTHERAPY; INTERVENTION;
D O I
10.1634/theoncologist.2009-0283
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Objective. Nutritional status in cancer has been mostly biased toward undernutrition, an issue now in dispute. We aimed to characterize nutrition status, to analyze associations between nutritional and clinical/cancer-related variables, and to quantify the relative weights of nutritional and cancer-related features. Methods. The cross-sectional study included 450 nonselected cancer patients (ages 18-95 years) at referral for radiotherapy. Nutritional status assessment included recent weight changes, body mass index (BMI) categorized by World Health Organization's age/sex criteria, and Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment (PG-SGA; validated/specific for oncology). Results. BMI identified 63% as >= 25 kg/m(2) (43% overweight, 20% obese) and 4% as undernourished. PG-SGA identified 29% as undernourished and 71% as well nourished. Crossing both methods, among the 319 (71%) well-nourished patients according to PG-SGA, 75% were overweight/obese and only 25% were well nourished according to BMI. Concordance between BMI and PG-SGA was evaluated and consistency was confirmed. More aggressive/advanced stage cancers were more prevalent in deficient and excessive nutritional status: in 83% (n = 235/282) of overweight/obese patients by BMI and in 85% (n = 111/131) of undernourished patients by PG-SGA. Results required adjustment for diagnoses: greater histological aggressiveness was found in overweight/obese prostate and breast cancer; undernutrition was associated with aggressive lung, colorectal, head-neck, stomach, and esophageal cancers (p < .005). Estimates of effect size revealed that overweight/obesity was associated with advanced stage (24%), aggressive breast (10%), and prostate (9%) cancers, whereas undernutrition was associated with more aggressive lung (6%), colorectal (6%), and head-neck (6%) cancers; in both instances, age and longer disease duration were of significance. Conclusion. Undernutrition and overweight/obesity have distinct implications and bear a negative prognosis in cancer. This study provides novel data on the prevalence of overweight/obesity and undernutrition in cancer patients and their potential role in cancer histological behavior. The Oncologist 2010; 15: 523-530
引用
收藏
页码:523 / 530
页数:8
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