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  3. Malnutrition Predicts Clinical Outcome in Patients with Neuroendocrine Neoplasias.
 

Malnutrition Predicts Clinical Outcome in Patients with Neuroendocrine Neoplasias.

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.74871
Date of Publication
December 8, 2015
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Universitätsklinik fü...

Contributor
Maasberg, Sebastian
Knappe-Drzikova, Barbora
Vonderbeck, Dorothée
Jann, Henning
Weylandt, Karsten H
Grieser, Christian
Pascher, Andreas
Pavel, Marianne
Wiedenmann, Bertram
Sturm, Andreas
Pape, Ulrich-Frank
Schefold, Jörg Christian
Universitätsklinik für Intensivmedizin
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Neuroendocrinology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0028-3835
Publisher
Karger
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1159/000442983
PubMed ID
26641457
Description
Malnutrition is a common problem in oncologic diseases influencing treatment outcomes, treatment complications, quality of life and survival. The potential role of malnutrition has not yet systematically been studied in neuroendocrine neoplasms (NEN), which due to growing prevalence and additional therapeutic options provide an increasing clinical challenge for diagnosis and management. The aim of this cross-sectional observational study, which included a long-term follow-up, was therefore to define the prevalence of malnutrition in 203 patients with NEN using various methodological approaches and to analyze the short- and long-term outcome of malnourished patients. A detailed subgroup analysis was also performed to define risk factors for poorer outcome. By applying malnutrition screening scores 21-25% of NEN-patients were at risk of or demonstrated manifest malnutrition. This was confirmed by anthropometric measurements, determination of serum surrogate parameters such as albumin and bioelectrical impedance analysis particularly phase angle α. Length of hospital stay (LoS) was significantly longer in malnourished NEN-patients while long-term overall survival was highly significantly reduced. Patients with high-grade (G3) neuroendocrine carcinomas, progressive disease and undergoing chemotherapy were at particular risk for malnutrition associated with a poorer outcome. Multivariate analysis confirmed the important and highly significant role of malnutrition as an independent prognostic factor for NEN besides proliferative capacity (G3-NEC). Malnutrition is therefore an underrecognized problem in NEN-patients, which should systematically be diagnosed by widely available standard methods such Nutritional Risk Screening (NRS) score, serum albumin levels and bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) and treated to improve both short- and long-term outcomes.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/137269
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442983.pdftextAdobe PDF234.43 KBpublisherpublishedOpen
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