| Literature DB >> 31791348 |
Kaitlin McLaughlin1, Lindsay Hedden1,2,3, Philip Pollock3, Celestia Higano3,4,5, Rachel A Murphy6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nutrition is important for prostate cancer (PC) survivorship care to help achieve a healthy weight, reduce treatment side effects and reduce the risk of developing other chronic diseases. We aimed to advance the understanding of the nutritional needs of men with PC and services that could be potentially implemented to address them.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Diet and cancer; Nutrition services; Prostate cancer; Supportive care; Survivorship
Year: 2019 PMID: 31791348 PMCID: PMC6889583 DOI: 10.1186/s12937-019-0506-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr J ISSN: 1475-2891 Impact factor: 3.271
Patient and partner responses to the nutrition session evaluation
| Participant | Response | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Q1. Was the material presented in a clear fashion and easy to understand? | |||
| Yes, N (%) | No, N (%) | ||
| Patient | 133 (100) | 0 | |
| Partner | 71 (100) | 0 | – |
| Patient with partner | 71 (100) | 0 | |
| Patient without partner | 39 (100) | 0 | – |
| Q2: Is there information you feel that was missed and should be included? | |||
| Yes, N (%) | No, N (%) | ||
| Patient | 18 (14) | 113 (86) | |
| Partner | 7 (11) | 56 (89) | 0.61 |
| Patient with partner | 8 (11.3) | 63 (88.7) | |
| Patient without partner | 8 (21.6) | 29 (78.4) | 0.15 |
| Q3: Would you prefer the session be longer or shorter? | |||
| Yes, N (%) | No N (%) | ||
| Patient | 14 (13) | 94 (87) | |
| Partner | 6 (11) | 48 (89) | 0.32 |
| Patient with partner | 13 (12.4) | 92 (87.6) | |
| Patient without partner | 5 (14.7) | 29 (85.3) | – |
| Q4: Did/would you find the inclusion of partners and/or family members valuable? | |||
| Yes, N (%) | No, N (%) | ||
| Patient | 103 (92) | 9 (8) | |
| Partner | 67 (99) | 1 (1) | – |
| Patient with partner | 128 (98.5) | 2 (1.5) | |
| Patient without partner | 21 (72.4) | 8 (27.6) | – |
| Mean rating out of 4 (SD) | |||
| Q5: Overall, how beneficial did you find the session? | |||
| Patient | 3.62 (0.54) | ||
| Partner | 3.64 (0.49) | 0.86 | |
| Patient with partner | 3.70 (0.55) | ||
| Patient without partner | 3.53 (0.50) | 0.10 | |
Comparisons between patients and partners and patient with partner and patient without partner for questions 1–4 with chi-square and question 5 with two-tailed t-test. Missing p-value indicates inadequate sample size for analysis
Studies identified in the nutrition services scoping review
| Author | Mode of nutrition services | Focus of nutrition services | Design | Aim | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Demark-Wahnefried [ | Home-based | Diet and exercise | RCT | To determine if custom exercise and nutrition print material is effective in promoting lifestyle changes for people living with breast or prostate cancer. | The FRESH START intervention arm demonstrated significant improvement in practicing goals, exercise, dietary intake and BMI compared to the control. |
| Christy [ | Home-based/ Individual counselling | Diet and exercise | RCT | To assess the efficacy of the FRESH START trial 2 years post baseline. | The intervention arm sustained significant improvements in dietary intake and diet quality compared to the control. |
| Mosher [ | Diet and exercise | RCT | To examine changes in self-efficacy as a mediator of the FRESH START intervention. | Changes in self-efficacy significantly mediated the effect of the intervention on dietary outcomes. | |
| Morey [ | Home-based | Diet and exercise | RCT | To determine if home-based multi-behaviour interventions can improve functional decline in older cancer survivors. | The intervention arm had a significant reduction in the rate of functional decline and improvements in physical activity, dietary behaviours and overall quality of life. |
| Demark-Wahnefried [ | Home-based | Diet and exercise | RCT | To determine if a home-based diet and exercise intervention can improve physical functioning in older adults with breast and prostate cancer. | At 6 months the intervention group improved diet quality and self-efficacy to exercise but these changes were not maintained post intervention. |
| Lebret [ | Home-based | Diet and exercise | Longitudinal survey | To assess the use of a diet and exercise tool-kit in improving well-being for men with PC on ADT. | The majority of patients and urologists reported satisfaction with the tool-kit and the majority of patients reported implementing guidelines from the toolkit. |
| O’Neil [ | Home-based | Diet and exercise | RCT | To assess if a home-based diet and exercise intervention can help minimize side effects of ADT for men with PC. | At 6 months the intervention arm demonstrated significant improvements in body composition, dietary intake, functional capacity but not fatigue, stress or QoL. |
| Bourke [ | Group education | Diet and exercise | RCT | To assess the effect of lifestyle interventions on QoL, diastolic blood pressure and fatigue in men with PC on ADT. | At completion the intervention arm had significant improvements in QoL, fatigue and exercise tolerance however only improvements in fatigue, exercise tolerance were sustained at 6 months. |
| Bourke [ | Group education | Diet and exercise | RCT | To assess the feasibility of a tapered supervised exercise and diet intervention for men with PC on ADT. | The intervention arm showed significant improvements in dietary intake, exercise, and fatigue however there were high attrition rates at 6 months. |
| Bourke [ | Group education | Diet and exercise | RCT | To qualitatively evaluate tapered exercise and diet intervention for men with PC on ADT. | Participants reported benefiting from the intervention both physically and psychologically. Participants reported benefits from dietary education but found adherence to guidelines difficult. |
| Carmody [ | Group education | Diet | RCT | To assess if dietary interventions can improve dietary intake, QoL and PSA velocity in men with PC. | The intervention arm demonstrated improvements in diet quality/ intake and QoL. No significant changes were observed for PSA velocity. |
| Nguyen [ | Group education/ Individual counselling | Diet and mindfulness | Pre-post | To measure changes in dietary intake and PSA velocity following a dietary and stress reduction intervention in men with recurrent PC. | Following the intervention the participants significantly improved dietary intake however no significant reductions in PSA rise were observed. |
| Davison [ | Group education | Diet | Pre-post | To measure the impact of a nutrition intervention on calcium and vitamin D intake for men with PC on ADT. | Following the intervention there were no significant increases in calcium and vitamin D through dietary intake however there were significant increases in through supplement intake. |
| Hebert [ | Group education/ Individual counselling | Diet and exercise /Diet and mindfulness | RCT | To assess the effects of lifestyle interventions on PSA levels and reducing the risk of PC recurrence. | The intervention arm did not show any significant changes in PSA levels however they did demonstrate significant improvements in dietary intake. |
| Ferguson [ | Group education | Comprehensive program | Implementation study | To evaluate the implementation and early impact of a nurse-led survivorship program for men with PC. | The program had high participation rates with 90% attendance. Feedback from participants suggests high user satisfaction and reported QoL improvement. |
| Baguley [ | Individual counselling | Diet | RCT | To assess the efficacy of a Mediterranean-style nutrition intervention on cancer related fatigue and QoL in men with PC on ADT. | Improvements in QoL and fatigue were not significant, however the intervention arm did demonstrate significant changes in weight. |
| Baguley [ | Individual counselling | Diet and exercise | RCT | To assess the efficacy of high intensity interval training in addition nutrition therapy on cancer related fatigue in men with PC on ADT. | N/A |
| Aggarwal [ | Individual counselling | Comprehensive program | Pre-post | To assess the adherence to a multidisciplinary clinic for men with PC on ADT and if the intervention can lessen the metabolic impacts of ADT. | Participation and adherence to the clinic was high with 95% adherence. The metabolic impact of ADT was minimal during the intervention. |
| Joly [ | Individual counselling | Diet and exercise | Pre-post | To assess the impact of a nutrition and exercise intervention on body composition and physical function in frail men with PC on ADT. | After 3 months of ADT participants had improved timed-up-and-go test while other measures of physical function and body composition remained stable. |
| Focht [ | Individual counselling | Diet and exercise | RCT | To assess the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of implementing a group-mediated cognitive behavioural lifestyle intervention for men with PC undergoing ADT. | N/A |
| Chan [ | Other | Diet and exercise | Program summary | The purpose of TrueNTH is to create an international partnership and develop interventions to improve the physical and mental well being of PC survivors. | Canada, the U.S.A, Australia and the U.K. are developing lifestyle interventions and programs for men with PC and will evaluate implementation approaches. |
| Cosby [ | Group education | Diet | Pre-post | To evaluate the effectiveness and satisfaction of a weekly diet and PC group education session on meeting information needs in promoting healthy body weights. | Significantly improved nutrition knowledge post session. Participants reported high satisfaction rates, usefulness of information, the importance of information and the value of group learning. |
| Golubić [ | Group education | Comprehensive program | Pre-post | To evaluate the effectiveness of Lifestyle 180, a comprehensive, lifestyle program, on chronic disease risk factors and QOL in cancer survivors. | Significant improvements in weight loss and WC, BMI and measured biomarker. Reported reduction in lipid lowering and BP medication. Reported improvements in perceived stress and QOL. |
| Takada [ | Group education | Diet | NRCT | To evaluated the efficacy of nutrition education on changes in daily rectal volume and dose during IMRT treatment. | Patients who attended the nutrition education session had decreased variations in rectal volume and treatment dose compared to controls resulting in more reproducible results. |
| Ongoing clinical trials: | |||||
| Goulart [ | Group education | Diet and exercise | RCT | To evaluate the multidisciplinary Living Well on Androgen Deprivation Therapy program on QoL, physical factors and biomarkers of secondary diseases in men with PC on ADT. | N/A |
| Kellogg Parsons [ | Individual counselling | Diet | RCT | To assess the impact of a telephone based dietary intervention on disease progression in men with PC on active surveillance. | N/A |
| McArdle [ | Individual counselling | Diet and exercise | RCT | To assess the feasibility of a nutrition and exercise counselling intervention on reducing the incidence of metabolic syndrome in men with PC on ADT. | N/A |
| Maliski [ | Individual counselling | Diet and exercise | RCT | To assess if counselling on lifestyle changes in addition to standard medical care can prevent heart problems and diabetes in men with PC on ADT. | N/A |
| Lee [ | Home-based | Comprehensive program | RCT | To assess if the efficacy of a web and mobile based lifestyle intervention on physical function, strength, body composition and QoL. | N/A |
| Aggarwal [ | Individual counselling | Comprehensive program | RCT | To assess if individualized counselling helps improve patient understanding, satisfaction, quality of life and anthropometrics. | |
Abbreviations: ADT Androgen deprivation therapy, NRCT Non-randomized controlled trial, QOL Quality of life, RCT Randomized, controlled trial, PC Prostate cancer, WC Waist circumference, BP Blood pressure, IMRT Intensity-modulated radiotherapy. Grey shading indicates secondary analysis of a study that was also captured in the scoping review and were therefore not considered when calculating the type and focus of interventions
Summary of studies identified in scoping review
| Study characteristics | Number (N) | Proportion (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Design | ||
| RCT | 17 | 63 |
| Pre-post | 6 | 22 |
| Other | 4 | 15 |
| Mode of nutrition service | ||
| Group education | 9 | 33 |
| Individual counselling | 9 | 33 |
| Home-based | 6 | 22 |
| Group / individual counselling | 2 | 7 |
| Other | 1 | 4 |
| Focus of intervention | ||
| Diet and exercise | 14 | 52 |
| Diet | 6 | 22 |
| Comprehensive program | 5 | 18 |
| Diet, mindfulness and exercise | 1 | 4 |
| Diet and mindfulness | 1 | 4 |
| Population | ||
| Men with PC treated with ADT | 15 | 55 |
| Men with PC | 8 | 30 |
| Cancer patients | 4 | 15 |