| Literature DB >> 26264480 |
Pei-Chun Chao1, Hui-Ju Chuang, Li-Yen Tsao, Pei-Ying Chen, Chia-Fen Hsu, Hsing-Chun Lin, Chiu-Yueh Chang, Cheau-Feng Lin.
Abstract
Four hundred and forty-four high-risk oncology patients with malnutrition participated in this study aimed at assessing the effectiveness of nutrition education on improving an oncology patient's dietary intake. We used a nutritional risk screening to select oncology patients in need of nutritional care. Team Nutrition provides technical assistance for foodservice, nutrition education for patients and their caregivers, and support for healthy eating and physical activity to improve their diets and their lives. The average contribution of protein and total energy of each patient increased after imparting the nutritional education to them. Thus, nutritional education is an effective measure to bring about a favorable and significant change in oncology patients' nutrient intake.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26264480 PMCID: PMC4532677 DOI: 10.7603/s40681-015-0017-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicine (Taipei) ISSN: 2211-8020
Fig. 1- Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool (MUST).
Fig. 2- Screening identifies cancer patients at high risk of malnutrition, who should then be referred to registered dietitians for optimal nutritional education.
- Patient characteristics and nutritional assessment results for all 444 patients. (Total number and percentage of patients)
| High risk of undernourished (MUST ≧ 2) | Total | Total |
|---|---|---|
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| Female | 109 | 24.55 |
| Male | 335 | 75.45 |
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| < 18.5 (score = 2) | 257 | 57.88 |
| 18.5-20 (score = 1) | 38 | 8.55 |
| > 20 (> 30 obese) (score 0) | 149 | 33.55 |
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| > 10% (score = 2) | 114 | 25.67 |
| 5-10% (score = 1) | 133 | 29.95 |
| < 5% (score 0) | 197 | 44.36 |
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| NPO > 5 days (score = 2) | 45 | 10.13 |
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| Squamous cell carcinoma | 85 | 19.14 |
| Oral/tongue cancer | 58 | 13.06 |
| Lung cancer | 52 | 11.71 |
| Intestinal cancer | 36 | 8.11 |
| Esophageal cancer | 35 | 7.88 |
| Liver cancer | 23 | 5.18 |
| Pancreas/gall cancer | 23 | 5.18 |
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma NPC | 22 | 4.95 |
| Gastric cancer | 18 | 4.05 |
| Breast cancer | 16 | 3.60 |
| Cervix/ovarian cancer | 15 | 3.38 |
| Others | 61 | 13.74 |
Fig. 3- Bar chart showing serum albumin in high risk cancer patient (n = 444).
- Average daily food intake by the subjects before and after nutrition education
| Mean | ±SD | Mean | ±SD | P-value† | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Energy intake (Kcal/D) | 1098.15 | 539.42 | 1578.90 | 454.74 | 0.000** |
| Protein intake (gm/kg) | 0.76 | 0.41 | 1.16 | 0.40 | 0.000** |
†Repeated measure ANOVA; adjustment gender, BMI, serum albumin.
**P < 0.01, significant at P < 0.05.
- Different levels between before and after nutrition education of patient’s energy and protein
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Energy intake (Kcal/D) | 0.000** | ||||
| < 500 | 62 | 13.96 | 12 | 2.703 | |
| 500-1000 | 107 | 24.10 | 42 | 9.459 | |
| 1001-1500 | 208 | 46.85 | 129 | 29.054 | |
| > 1500 | 67 | 15.09 | 261 | 58.784 | |
| Protein intake (gm/kg) | 0.000** | ||||
| < 0.6 | 135 | 30.41 | 30 | 6.76 | |
| 0.6-0.8 | 153 | 34.46 | 86 | 19.37 | |
| 0.9-1.2 | 105 | 23.65 | 121 | 27.25 | |
| > 1.2 | 51 | 11.49 | 207 | 46.62w | |
†McNemar’s test.
**P < 0.01.