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Authors Ge T, Lin T, Yang J, Wang M
Received 6 November 2018
Accepted for publication 29 January 2019
Published 19 March 2019 Volume 2019:11 Pages 2225—2231
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/CMAR.S193567
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewers approved by Dr Colin Mak
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Dr Chien-Feng Li
Background: Mortality
of lung cancer in northern China has been increasing at an alarming speed. The
consequences of malnutrition may include an increased risk of many
complications. However, the nutritional status in advanced lung cancer patients
is still unknown. So the aims of this research are to report on the prevalence
of malnutrition in our population, the proportion of participants requiring
nutrition interventions, and the relationship between nutritional status at
diagnosis and overall survival (OS).
Patients and methods: We
evaluated 495 patients with advanced lung cancer (stage IIIB and IV).
Nutritional status was estimated by the Patient-Generated Subjective Global
Assessment (PG-SGA). This study investigated the clinical significance of
PG-SGA scores at admission by following OS. Kaplan–Meier survival analysis and
the log-rank test were used to calculate OS. Univariate and multivariate
analyses of the OS were performed using Cox analysis.
Results: Our
results showed that 88.9% of the patients required nutrition intervention and
25.1% of the patients required improved nutrition-related symptom management
and/or urgent nutritional support (PG-SGA score ≥9). Factors related to
malnutrition were age, sex, pathology, TNM stage, smoking condition, anemia,
body mass index, pre-albumin, and albumin. The research outcomes indicated that
PG-SGA score at admission was significantly associated with OS, which was still
maintained when stratified by age and sex.
Conclusion: Malnutrition
was prevalent in patients with advanced lung cancer. Poor nutritional status
was associated with worse clinical outcomes.
Keywords: nutritional
assessment, malnutrition, lung cancer, survival, PG-SGA