| Literature DB >> 35792925 |
Riccardo Caccialanza1, Alessandro Laviano2, Cristina Bosetti3, Mariateresa Nardi4, Valentina Casalone5, Lucilla Titta6, Roberto Mele7, Giovanni De Pergola8, Francesco De Lorenzo9, Paolo Pedrazzoli10.
Abstract
Malnutrition is a common clinical and public health problem that can frequently affect patients in hospital and community settings. In particular, cancer-related malnutrition results from a combination of metabolic dysregulation and anorexia, caused both by the tumor itself and by its treatment. Patients with head-neck cancer, or with gastroesophageal, pancreatic, lung, and colorectal cancer, are particularly at risk of developing malnutrition, with a prevalence varying between 30 and 50% depending on tumor location and anti-cancer treatment complications. Prevention and adequate management of malnutrition is now considered an essential key point of therapeutic pathways of patients with cancer, with the aim to enhance their quality of life, reduce complications, and improve clinical outcomes. Oral nutritional supplements (ONS) are part of the nutritional therapy and represent an effective tool to address cancer-related malnutrition, as supported by growing literature data. However, patients' access to ONS - which is regulated by different national and regional policies in terms of reimbursement - is quite heterogeneous. This narrative review aims to summarize the current knowledge about the role of ONS in terms of cost-effectiveness in the management of actively treated patients with cancer, following surgery and/or radiotherapy/chemotherapy treatment and to present the position on this issue of the Alliance Against Cancer, the Italian National Oncology Network, coming up from a focused virtual roundtable of the Survivorship Care and Nutritional Support Working Group.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer treatment; Cost-effectiveness; Malnutrition; Nutritional support; Oral nutrition supplements; Patients with cancer
Year: 2022 PMID: 35792925 DOI: 10.1007/s00520-022-07269-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Support Care Cancer ISSN: 0941-4355 Impact factor: 3.603