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Assessment of Body Composition in Oncologic Patients: Experimental Survey on the Role of Bioimpedentiometric Analysis

Overall survival of oncologic patients is strongly influenced by the incidence of malnutrition, with subsequent loss of muscle mass until sarcopenia. In this respect, the assessment of body composition has a pivotal role in order to manage the clinical consequences of muscle loss. AIM: This study fo...

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Autores principales: Gammone, Maria Alessandra, Ficoneri, Cristiana, D’Orazio, Nicolantonio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Sciendo 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7851971/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33584888
http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/joeb-2019-0013
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author Gammone, Maria Alessandra
Ficoneri, Cristiana
D’Orazio, Nicolantonio
author_facet Gammone, Maria Alessandra
Ficoneri, Cristiana
D’Orazio, Nicolantonio
author_sort Gammone, Maria Alessandra
collection PubMed
description Overall survival of oncologic patients is strongly influenced by the incidence of malnutrition, with subsequent loss of muscle mass until sarcopenia. In this respect, the assessment of body composition has a pivotal role in order to manage the clinical consequences of muscle loss. AIM: This study focuses on the body composition assessment in oncologic patients, following a diet plan in order to detect and contrast neoplastic cachexia. MATERIALS AND METHOD: 35 oncologic patients were enrolled and divided into two groups: 24 responders (R) and 11 non-responders (NR). Anthropometric data were collected and body composition was assessed through bioimpedentiometry. All patients received an individualized normocaloric diet. Energetic content was assigned on the basis of individual basal metabolic rate estimated by BIA. All patients were revaluated by anthropometry and bioimpedentiometry 3 and 6 months thereafter. RESULTS: Comparing the two male groups R and NR after 6 months, the former maintained almost the same confidence interval, unlike the latter whose interval increased, indicating a light worsening both of body composition and of clinical conditions. Furthermore, in the same male responder group, an improvement of the phase angle (PhA), a positive prognostic factor, was found, with an average weight loss between 2,6 – 3 kg of fat mass (FM). Besides, data show how the R female group maintained the confidence interval unlike the NR female group, whose confidence interval remarkably increased, therefore indicating an important alteration of body composition and subsequently a clinical conditions worsening. Finally, comparing the NR male group with the NR female group after 6 months, a remarkable worsening of body composition (marker of tissue decay and damage) could be noticed in the latter group. CONCLUSION: After 6 months, NR patients show worse results (both in the body composition and in the clinical conditions) compared to the responders, with particularly worse results in females, probably because of a genetically determined sex-related smaller muscle cells and inferior muscular strength. A multidimensional assessment of oncologic patient is necessary, with a special attention to nutritional evaluation and body composition monitoring, in order to avoid malnutrition and subsequent further clinical worsening.
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spelling pubmed-78519712021-02-11 Assessment of Body Composition in Oncologic Patients: Experimental Survey on the Role of Bioimpedentiometric Analysis Gammone, Maria Alessandra Ficoneri, Cristiana D’Orazio, Nicolantonio J Electr Bioimpedance Research Articles Overall survival of oncologic patients is strongly influenced by the incidence of malnutrition, with subsequent loss of muscle mass until sarcopenia. In this respect, the assessment of body composition has a pivotal role in order to manage the clinical consequences of muscle loss. AIM: This study focuses on the body composition assessment in oncologic patients, following a diet plan in order to detect and contrast neoplastic cachexia. MATERIALS AND METHOD: 35 oncologic patients were enrolled and divided into two groups: 24 responders (R) and 11 non-responders (NR). Anthropometric data were collected and body composition was assessed through bioimpedentiometry. All patients received an individualized normocaloric diet. Energetic content was assigned on the basis of individual basal metabolic rate estimated by BIA. All patients were revaluated by anthropometry and bioimpedentiometry 3 and 6 months thereafter. RESULTS: Comparing the two male groups R and NR after 6 months, the former maintained almost the same confidence interval, unlike the latter whose interval increased, indicating a light worsening both of body composition and of clinical conditions. Furthermore, in the same male responder group, an improvement of the phase angle (PhA), a positive prognostic factor, was found, with an average weight loss between 2,6 – 3 kg of fat mass (FM). Besides, data show how the R female group maintained the confidence interval unlike the NR female group, whose confidence interval remarkably increased, therefore indicating an important alteration of body composition and subsequently a clinical conditions worsening. Finally, comparing the NR male group with the NR female group after 6 months, a remarkable worsening of body composition (marker of tissue decay and damage) could be noticed in the latter group. CONCLUSION: After 6 months, NR patients show worse results (both in the body composition and in the clinical conditions) compared to the responders, with particularly worse results in females, probably because of a genetically determined sex-related smaller muscle cells and inferior muscular strength. A multidimensional assessment of oncologic patient is necessary, with a special attention to nutritional evaluation and body composition monitoring, in order to avoid malnutrition and subsequent further clinical worsening. Sciendo 2019-12-31 /pmc/articles/PMC7851971/ /pubmed/33584888 http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/joeb-2019-0013 Text en © 2019 Maria Alessandra Gammone et al., published by Sciendo http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Gammone, Maria Alessandra
Ficoneri, Cristiana
D’Orazio, Nicolantonio
Assessment of Body Composition in Oncologic Patients: Experimental Survey on the Role of Bioimpedentiometric Analysis
title Assessment of Body Composition in Oncologic Patients: Experimental Survey on the Role of Bioimpedentiometric Analysis
title_full Assessment of Body Composition in Oncologic Patients: Experimental Survey on the Role of Bioimpedentiometric Analysis
title_fullStr Assessment of Body Composition in Oncologic Patients: Experimental Survey on the Role of Bioimpedentiometric Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Body Composition in Oncologic Patients: Experimental Survey on the Role of Bioimpedentiometric Analysis
title_short Assessment of Body Composition in Oncologic Patients: Experimental Survey on the Role of Bioimpedentiometric Analysis
title_sort assessment of body composition in oncologic patients: experimental survey on the role of bioimpedentiometric analysis
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7851971/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33584888
http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/joeb-2019-0013
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