| Literature DB >> 35210853 |
Alessio Molfino1, Giovanni Imbimbo1, Alessandro Laviano1.
Abstract
Malnutrition is highly common among cancer patients and is associated with a poor quality of life, increased treatment toxicities and decreased survival. The screening of malnutrition should be performed in an early stage of cancer disease and should be rapid, not expensive and highly sensitive to identify the risk of developing malnutrition. Importantly, international clinical guidelines suggest to perform screening for malnutrition in all cancer patients and if the risk is present, they recommend to perform a full nutritional assessment. During the screening phase, different nutritional parameters are considered including the loss of appetite, low food intake, body weight loss and burden of the disease. These items are present in several screening tools, such as the Nutrition Risk Screening (NRS)-2002, the Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool (MUST) and the Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA) which represent the most widely used tools to screen for an altered nutritional status in cancer patients. Recently, the Global Leadership Initiative on Malnutrition (GLIM) developed an assessment tool for the diagnosis of malnutrition taking into account the presence of i) involuntary body weight loss, ii) body mass index, iii) low muscle mass, iv) low food intake and disease burden/inflammation; in particular, body weight loss, decreased body mass index (BMI), and low muscle mass are considered as phenotypic criteria, whereas reduced food intake, disease burden and inflammation are defined as etiologic criteria. To perform the diagnosis of malnutrition, GLIM consensus considered the presence of at least one phenotypic and one etiologic criterion. The above-mentioned screening tools were validated in different clinical settings and suggesting the use of one tool vs another is challenging considering, among others, different factors including the type and stage of cancer and the setting (i.e., inpatient or outpatient care). Recent data obtained among large cohorts of cancer patients indicate that personalized nutritional therapy reduced mortality risk and ameliorated quality of life and functionality among cancer patients with high nutritional risk, supporting the urgent need for implementing screening and diagnosis of malnutrition in this context.Entities:
Keywords: anorexia; assessment; body weight loss; cachexia; cancer; malnutrition; screening
Year: 2022 PMID: 35210853 PMCID: PMC8857947 DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S294105
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Manag Res ISSN: 1179-1322 Impact factor: 3.989
Characteristics of the MUST, NRS-2002, MNA-SF and PG-SGA SF Tools
| MUST | NRS-2002 | MNA-SF | PG-SGA SF | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Settings | Multiple | In-Hospital | Geriatric | Multiple |
| Scoring system | Score 0 = low risk Score 1 = medium risk Score 2 = high risk | Not present | 12–14 points: normal | 0–36 points (higher score indicates poorer nutritional status) |
| BMI assessment | >20 = 0 | At risk if BMI <20.5 kg/m2 | 0 = BMI less than 19 | Not present |
| Body weight loss in previous 3/6 months | <5% = 0 | Yes, or not | >3kg = 0 | During the last 2 weeks: |
| Food intake | If patient is acutely ill and there has been or is likely to be no nutritional intake for >5 days | Reduced dietary intake in the last week | In previous 3 months | Food intake during the past month |
| Burden of disease | Admission in ICU | Including presence of psychological stress or acute disease in the past 3 months | Not evaluated | |
| Mobility | Not evaluated | Not evaluated | 0 = bed or chair bound | Functional activity self-evaluated over the past month |
| Neuropsychological problems | Not evaluated | Not evaluated | 0 = severe dementia or depression | Not evaluated |
| Full nutritional assessment | If score ≥ 1 | If “Yes” to any | If score is 11 or less | Not specified |
| Time required to complete the questionnaire | ~1 min | ~1 min | ~2 min | ~5 min |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; MUST, Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool; NRS-2002, Nutrition Risk Screening 2002; MNA-SF, Mini Nutritional Assessment-Short Form; PG-SGA-SF, Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment-Short Form.