| Literature DB >> 35812181 |
Riccardo Caccialanza1, Paolo Cotogni2, Emanuele Cereda1, Paolo Bossi3, Giuseppe Aprile4, Paolo Delrio5, Patrizia Gnagnarella6, Annalisa Mascheroni7, Taira Monge8, Ettore Corradi9, Michele Grieco10, Sergio Riso11, Francesco De Lorenzo12, Francesca Traclò12, Elisabetta Iannelli12, Giordano Domenico Beretta13, Michela Zanetti14, Saverio Cinieri15, Vittorina Zagonel16, Paolo Pedrazzoli17.
Abstract
Malnutrition is a frequent problem in cancer patients, which leads to prolonged and repeated hospitalizations, increased treatment-related toxicity, reduced response to cancer treatment, impaired quality of life, a worse overall prognosis and the avoidable waste of health care resources. Despite being perceived as a limiting factor in oncologic treatments by both oncologists and patients, there is still a considerable gap between need and actual delivery of nutrition care, and attitudes still vary considerably among health care professionals. In the last 5 years, the Italian Intersociety Working Group for Nutritional Support in Cancer Patients (WG), has repeatedly revisited this issue and has concluded that some improvement in nutritional care in Italy has occurred, at least with regard to awareness and institutional activities. In the same period, new international guidelines for the management of malnutrition and cachexia have been released. Despite these valuable initiatives, effective structural strategies and concrete actions aimed at facing the challenging issues of nutritional care in oncology are still needed, requiring the active participation of scientific societies and health authorities. As a continuation of the WG's work, we have reviewed available data present in the literature from January 2016 to September 2021, together with the most recent guidelines issued by scientific societies and health authorities, thus providing an update of the 2016 WG practical recommendations, with suggestions for new areas/issues for possible improvement and implementation. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: cancer patients; malnutrition; nutritional care; nutritional support; practical recommendations
Year: 2022 PMID: 35812181 PMCID: PMC9254882 DOI: 10.7150/jca.73130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer ISSN: 1837-9664 Impact factor: 4.478
Nutritional counseling process in cancer patients
| Nutrition Assessment and Reassessment: | • body weight assessment / changes / body composition; |
|---|---|
| • problems, difficulties and symptoms related to treatments that limit the consumption or absorption of nutrients; | |
| • definition of objectives; | |
| • monitoring and re-evaluation to determine if the patients has achieved, or is making progress toward, the planned goals. |
Summary of the Intersociety Italian Working Group for Nutritional Support in Cancer Patients updated recommendations
| - Nutritional screening should be performed, preferably by nurses, using validated tools (NRS 2002, MUST, MST, MNA, PG-SGA) upon diagnosis, systematically repeated at each outpatient visit and within 48 hours since hospital admission. |
| - Patients at nutritional risk should be referred promptly for comprehensive nutritional assessment, possibly including the evaluation of body composition, and support to clinical nutrition services or medical personnel with documented skills in clinical nutrition. |
| - Patients with cancer types expected to affect nutritional status (head & neck, gastrointestinal, lung), advanced stage or treatment (high-dose chemotherapy, radical radiotherapy, major abdominal surgery or multimodal [either combined or sequential]) should be referred directly to clinical nutrition specialists for early comprehensive nutritional assessment, counseling/support and a strict monitoring program. |
| - Nutritional support should be initiated swiftly and targeted for each patient according to nutritional and clinical conditions, planned treatment and expected outcome. It should comprise nutritional counseling with the possible use of oral nutritional supplements and/or artificial nutrition (enteral nutrition, total or supplemental parenteral nutrition) according to the assessment and ensure the strict monitoring of spontaneous food intake, tolerance and effectiveness. |
| - Nutritional support and dietary modifications should aim to assist the maintenance or recovery of nutritional status by increasing or preserving protein and calorie intake. “Alternative hypocaloric anti-cancer diets” (e.g. macrobiotic or vegan diets), fasting and fasting-mimicking diets are not recommended. |
| - The autonomous use of dietary supplements should be discouraged. They should be prescribed by clinical nutrition specialists according to documented deficiencies and clinical conditions. Their efficacy and patients' compliance should be regularly monitored and reassessed. |
| - Every cancer patient undergoing major surgery should follow a personalized perioperative “Enhanced Recovery After Surgery” program that should comprise scheduled steps, including nutritional assessment and support. |
| - Nutritional support should be integrated into palliative care programs when the risk of dying from malnutrition is greater than from cancer progression, according to individual-based evaluations, quality of life implications, life expectancy and patients' will. Nutritional counseling aimed at alleviating nutrition-related symptoms should be provided to cancer patients receiving palliative care. |
| - Home artificial nutrition should be prescribed - even in the early phase if needed - and regularly monitored using defined protocols shared by all the healthcare professionals involved in patient care at institutional or, ideally regional/national level. |
| - Nutritional parameters should be always evaluated and considered as potential confounders in outcome assessment and study design in clinical oncology research. |
| - Adequately sized and designed clinical and cost-effectiveness trials, possibly involving cancer patient associations' representatives in the design process, are still needed in order to improve the evidence in favour of nutritional support in different care settings. The lack of standard “high level” evidence should not be a justification for overlooking nutritional care. |
| - The introduction of multi-disciplinary nutritional teams or the inclusion of clinical nutrition specialists in the existing local tumor boards (at least for the cancer types associated with the highest nutritional risk [head & neck, gastrointestinal, lung]) is strongly recommended. |