학술논문

Impairment of Nutritional Status and Quality of Life Following Minimal-Invasive Esophagectomy—A Prospective Cohort Analysis.
Document Type
Article
Source
Cancers. Jan2024, Vol. 16 Issue 2, p266. 13p.
Subject
*FECAL analysis
*VITAMIN B12
*NUTRITIONAL assessment
*MINIMALLY invasive procedures
*FUNCTIONAL status
*DIET therapy
*SURVEYS
*QUALITY of life
*MALNUTRITION
*RESEARCH funding
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*WEIGHT loss
*BLOOD testing
*ESOPHAGEAL tumors
*NUTRITIONAL status
*LONGITUDINAL method
*DISEASE risk factors
Language
ISSN
2072-6694
Abstract
Simple Summary: After minimal-invasive resection esophagectomy for cancer, patients experience significant impairments to nutritional supply and quality of life. The meticulous monitoring of vitamin status and potentially treatable nutritional intake is therefore mandatory. Minimal-invasive resection of the esophagus for esophageal cancer has led to a relevant decrease in postoperative morbidity. Postoperatively, patients still suffer from surgical and adjuvant therapy-related symptoms impairing nutrition and quality of life. The aim of this study was to evaluate the nutritional status and associated symptoms six months after esophagectomy. Patients who attended follow-up examination six months after minimal-invasive esophagectomy were included. Blood and fecal tests, quality of life surveys (QLQ-C30 and QLQ-OG25) and nutritional risk screening (NRS) were performed. Twenty-four patients participated. The mean weight loss was 11 kg. A significant decrease in vitamin B12 (737 to 467 pg/mL; p = 0.033), ferritin (302 to 126 ng/mL; p = 0.012) and haptoglobin (227 to 152 mg/dL; p = 0.025) was found. In total, 47% of the patients had an impaired pancreatic function (fecal elastase < 500 µg/g). Physical (72 to 58; p = 0.034) and social functioning (67 to 40; p = 0.022) was significantly diminished, while self-reported global health status remained stable (52 to 54). The number of patients screened and found to be in need of nutritional support according to NRS score decreased slightly (59% to 52%). After MIE, patients should be meticulously monitored for nutritional status after surgery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]