Publication | Closed Access
The value of nutrition support in children with cancer
41
Citations
31
References
1986
Year
MalnutritionNutritionNutrition DevelopmentPublic Health NutritionNutrition SupportNutritional InterventionsDietary IntakePublic HealthCancer ResearchHealth EducationMedical NutritionBone Marrow SuppressionMedicineClinical NutritionHealth PromotionMedical Nutrition TherapyEnteral NutritionMicronutrientsDietary TherapyPediatricsChild NutritionOncologyNutrition Assessment
A positive stance towards nutrition support of the child with cancer assures potential for normal growth, development, and quality of life during extended oncologic treatment. Data from recent studies of children with cancer (advanced neuroblastoma, Wilms' tumor) demonstrate the importance of integrating nutrition staging, assessment, and support into treatment protocols. Patients with solid tumors and lymphomas who are malnourished at diagnosis have a poor outcome when compared to nourished counterparts. Enteral nutrition (intensive nutrition counseling and favorite, nutritious foods) is effective in low nutritional risk groups but ineffective in preventing or reversing protein-energy malnutrition in high nutritional risk groups. For high-risk groups, central parenteral nutrition is a relatively short-term, but important, support measure which allows children to grow despite extended periods of intense oncologic treatment. The patient's nutritional course may affect bone marrow suppression and the ability to tolerate aggressive chemotherapeutic treatment. Although treatment tolerance may be improved with nutrition support, adequacy of primary oncologic treatment outweighs other supportive factors as a determinant of ultimate survival.
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