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      Impact of musculoskeletal degradation on cancer outcomes and strategies for management in clinical practice

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      Proceedings of the Nutrition Society
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          The prevalence of malnutrition in patients with cancer is one of the highest of all patient groups. Weight loss (WL) is a frequent manifestation of malnutrition in cancer and several large-scale studies have reported that involuntary WL affects 50–80% of patients with cancer, with the degree of WL dependent on tumour site, type and stage of disease. The study of body composition in oncology using computed tomography has unearthed the importance of both low muscle mass (sarcopenia) and low muscle attenuation as important prognostic indications of unfavourable outcomes including poorer tolerance to chemotherapy; significant deterioration in performance status and quality of life (QoL), poorer post-operative outcomes and shortened survival. While often hidden by excess fat and high BMI, muscle abnormalities are highly prevalent in patients with cancer (ranging from 10 to 90%). Early screening to identify individuals with sarcopenia and decreased muscle quality would allow for earlier multimodal interventions to attenuate adverse body compositional changes. Multimodal therapies (combining nutritional counselling, exercise and anti-inflammatory drugs) are currently the focus of randomised trials to examine if this approach can provide a sufficient stimulus to prevent or slow the cascade of tissue wasting and if this then impacts on outcomes in a positive manner. This review will focus on the aetiology of musculoskeletal degradation in cancer; the impact of sarcopenia on chemotherapy tolerance, post-operative complications, QoL and survival; and outline current strategies for attenuation of muscle loss in clinical practice.

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          Contributors
          (View ORCID Profile)
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          Journal
          Proceedings of the Nutrition Society
          Proc. Nutr. Soc.
          Cambridge University Press (CUP)
          0029-6651
          1475-2719
          February 2021
          November 03 2020
          February 2021
          : 80
          : 1
          : 73-91
          Article
          10.1017/S0029665120007855
          32981540
          0c47d8c6-341d-4e16-8344-9192630b0a70
          © 2021

          https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms

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