Parenteral Nutrition in Palliative Cancer Care: Detrimental, Futile, or Beneficial?
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34851Dato
2024-05-11Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Løhre, Erik Torbjørn; Solheim, Tora S; Jakobsen, Gunnhild; Vagnildhaug, Ola Magne; Karlsen, Terese Louise Schmidberger; Habberstad, Ragnhild Hansdatter; Balstad, Trude Rakel; Thronæs, MortenSammendrag
Palliative cancer care patients may live for a long time, but malnutrition worsens the
prognosis. Parenteral nutrition (PN) is suitable for replenishing a calorie deficit, but its advantages
and tolerance late in the cancer trajectory are debated. We examined symptom development in
hospitalized patients with and without PN. A total of 21 palliative cancer care patients receiving
PN and 155 palliative cancer care patients not receiving PN during hospitalization in a specialized
unit were retrospectively compared. We studied symptom intensity at admission, symptom relief
during the hospital stay, and survival. The patients had locally advanced or metastatic cancer, a
mean age of 70 years, and their median ECOG performance status was III. Symptom burden at
admission was similar in the compared groups. Symptom relief during hospitalization was also
similar. However, patients already on PN at admission reported more nausea and patients receiving
PN during hospitalization reported better nausea relief compared to patients not receiving this
intervention. Overall median survival was less than two months and similar in the compared groups.
Based on a limited number of observations and a suboptimal study design, we were not able to
demonstrate an increased symptom burden for palliative cancer care patients receiving PN late in the
disease trajectory.
Forlag
MDPISitering
Løhre, Solheim, Jakobsen, Vagnildhaug, Karlsen, Habberstad, Balstad, Thronæs. Parenteral Nutrition in Palliative Cancer Care: Detrimental, Futile, or Beneficial?. Current Oncology. 2024;31(5):2748-2757Metadata
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