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      Valoración e intervención nutricional en pacientes oncológicos hospitalizados en riesgo de desnutrición o con desnutrición: evaluación del efecto sobre parámetros antropométricos y de composición corporal Translated title: Nutritional assessment and intervention in hospitalized cancer patients at risk of or with Malnutrition: evaluation of the effect on anthropometric and body composition parameters

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          Abstract

          Resumen Introducción: la desnutrición es un problema frecuente en los pacientes oncológicos que empeora durante la hospitalización y se asocia con mayor morbimortalidad y deterioro de la calidad de vida. Objetivos: describir el efecto de la implantación de un protocolo de valoración y soporte nutricional sobre el estado nutricional de pacientes oncológicos hospitalizados. Métodos: estudio prospectivo, no controlado y cuasiexperimental en pacientes oncológicos ingresados en un servicio de oncología de forma consecutiva, independientemente de su estado nutricional, entre septiembre de 2019 y marzo de 2020. Se determinaron los parámetros antropométricos, la composición corporal y la fuerza prensora de la mano al ingreso y al alta. Se calculó el porcentaje de pacientes con desnutrición, dinapenia y sarcopenia al ingreso y al alta. Resultados: un total de 90 pacientes oncológicos participaron en este estudio (edad media: 66 años, 67,8 % hombres). El 33,2 % de los pacientes presentaban un tumor en el tracto gastrointestinal y el 73,3 % de los pacientes se encontraban en estadio IV. El 95 % necesitaron soporte nutricional (suplementación nutricional, nutrición enteral o nutrición parenteral). Tras la intervención nutricional no se encontraron diferencias en los parámetros antropométricos, con una pérdida de peso media de 0,1, aunque se observaron mejorías en la composición corporal. El porcentaje de pacientes desnutridos se mantuvo estable al ingreso y al alta independientemente del criterio empleado Conclusiones: la implementación de un protocolo de valoración y soporte nutricional al ingreso en pacientes oncológicos puede ayudar a evitar o retrasar el empeoramiento de su estado nutricional durante la hospitalización.

          Translated abstract

          Abstract Introduction: Malnutrition is a common problem in cancer patients that worsens during hospitalization and is associated with increased morbidity and mortality, and impaired quality of life. Objectives: to describe the effect of implementing a Nutritional assessment and support protocol on the Nutritional status of hospitalized cancer patients. Methods: a prospective, cross-sectional, non-controlled, quasi-experimental study in cancer patients admitted to an oncology service consecutively regardless of their Nutritional status between September 2019 and March 2020. Anthropometric parameters, body composition, and hand grip strength were measured at admission and discharge. The percentage of patients with Malnutrition, dynapenia, and sarcopenia at admission and discharge was calculated. Results: a total of 90 cancer patients participated in this study (mean age: 66 years, 67.8 % men); 33.2 % of the patients had a tumor in the gastrointestinal tract and 73.3 % of the patients were in stage IV; 95 % required Nutritional support (nutritional supplementation, enteral nutrition or parenteral nutrition). After the nutritional intervention, no differences were found in the anthropometric parameters with a mean weight loss of 0.1, although improvements in body composition were observed. The percentage of malnourished patients remained stable on admission and discharge regardless of the criteria used. Conclusions: the implementation of a protocol for assessment and nutritional support at admission in cancer patients may help prevent or delay the worsening of their nutritional status during hospital stay.

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          Sarcopenia: revised European consensus on definition and diagnosis

          doi: 10.1093/ageing/afy169 In the original version of the above paper there was an error in Table 3, which shows the recommended cut-off points for ASM/height2 in women. The cut-off point was given as <6.0 kg/m2, but the correct value is <5.5 kg/m2. This has now been corrected online. The authors wish to apologise for this error.
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            GLIM criteria for the diagnosis of malnutrition – A consensus report from the global clinical nutrition community *

            Summary Rationale This initiative is focused on building a global consensus around core diagnostic criteria for malnutrition in adults in clinical settings. Methods In January 2016, the Global Leadership Initiative on Malnutrition (GLIM) was convened by several of the major global clinical nutrition societies. GLIM appointed a core leadership committee and a supporting working group with representatives bringing additional global diversity and expertise. Empirical consensus was reached through a series of face‐to‐face meetings, telephone conferences, and e‐mail communications. Results A two‐step approach for the malnutrition diagnosis was selected, i.e., first screening to identify “at risk” status by the use of any validated screening tool, and second, assessment for diagnosis and grading the severity of malnutrition. The malnutrition criteria for consideration were retrieved from existing approaches for screening and assessment. Potential criteria were subjected to a ballot among the GLIM core and supporting working group members. The top five ranked criteria included three phenotypic criteria (weight loss, low body mass index, and reduced muscle mass) and two etiologic criteria (reduced food intake or assimilation, and inflammation or disease burden). To diagnose malnutrition at least one phenotypic criterion and one etiologic criterion should be present. Phenotypic metrics for grading severity as Stage 1 (moderate) and Stage 2 (severe) malnutrition are proposed. It is recommended that the etiologic criteria be used to guide intervention and anticipated outcomes. The recommended approach supports classification of malnutrition into four etiology‐related diagnosis categories. Conclusion A consensus scheme for diagnosing malnutrition in adults in clinical settings on a global scale is proposed. Next steps are to secure further collaboration and endorsements from leading nutrition professional societies, to identify overlaps with syndromes like cachexia and sarcopenia, and to promote dissemination, validation studies, and feedback. The diagnostic construct should be re‐considered every 3–5 years.
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              ESPEN expert group recommendations for action against cancer-related malnutrition

              Patients with cancer are at particularly high risk for malnutrition because both the disease and its treatments threaten their nutritional status. Yet cancer-related nutritional risk is sometimes overlooked or under-treated by clinicians, patients, and their families. The European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism (ESPEN) recently published evidence-based guidelines for nutritional care in patients with cancer. In further support of these guidelines, an ESPEN oncology expert group met for a Cancer and Nutrition Workshop in Berlin on October 24 and 25, 2016. The group examined the causes and consequences of cancer-related malnutrition, reviewed treatment approaches currently available, and built the rationale and impetus for clinicians involved with care of patients with cancer to take actions that facilitate nutrition support in practice. The content of this position paper is based on presentations and discussions at the Berlin meeting. The expert group emphasized 3 key steps to update nutritional care for people with cancer: (1) screen all patients with cancer for nutritional risk early in the course of their care, regardless of body mass index and weight history; (2) expand nutrition-related assessment practices to include measures of anorexia, body composition, inflammatory biomarkers, resting energy expenditure, and physical function; (3) use multimodal nutritional interventions with individualized plans, including care focused on increasing nutritional intake, lessening inflammation and hypermetabolic stress, and increasing physical activity.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                nh
                Nutrición Hospitalaria
                Nutr. Hosp.
                Grupo Arán (Madrid, Madrid, Spain )
                0212-1611
                1699-5198
                December 2022
                : 39
                : 6
                : 1316-1324
                Affiliations
                [4] Valencia orgnameHospital General universitario de Valencia orgdiv1Servicio de Oncología Médica España
                [6] Madrid orgnameCIBERONC orgdiv1Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red Cáncer España
                [5] Valencia orgnameHospital General universitario de Valencia orgdiv1Fundación Investigación orgdiv2Laboratorio de Oncología Molecular España
                [2] Valencia orgnameFundación Hospital General universitario de Valencia España
                [3] Valencia orgnameUniversidad de Valencia orgdiv1Departamento de Medicina España
                [1] Valencia orgnameHospital General universitario de Valencia orgdiv1Servicio de Endocrinología y Nutrición España
                Article
                S0212-16112022001000014 S0212-1611(22)03900600014
                10.20960/nh.04219
                a39d2361-3923-47c3-a8c1-dc6db2145739

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 05 August 2022
                : 02 May 2022
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 26, Pages: 9
                Product

                SciELO Spain

                Categories
                Trabajos Originales

                Cancer,Hospitalized patients,Malnutrition,Nutritional intervention,Body composition,Pacientes hospitalizados,Cáncer,Desnutrición,Intervención nutricional,Composición corporal

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