Abstract

Taste acuity of adult patients undergoing cancer treatment has been well investigated; however, studies of taste acuity after completion of cancer treatment are limited, particularly in children. This study aimed to assess taste acuity in pediatric cancer patients after treatment completion. Seventy-three patients who had completed cancer treatment (median age, 13 years; range, 7 - 18 years) and had not received any further treatment for at least 6 months were enrolled. Eighty-one healthy children (median age, 10 years; range, 8 - 19 years) served as controls. We determined the thresholds for four tastes (sweet, salty, sour, and bitter) using the filter-paper disc method. There was no significant difference in the thresholds of taste acuity for the four test solutions between the patient and control groups. The duration since treatment completion (<5 years vs. ≥5 years) had no significant impact on taste acuity for the four test solutions. The threshold for tasting salt was significantly higher in the group that had received chemotherapy + radiation and/or hematopoietic stem cell transplantation than that in the group that had received chemotherapy-only. Our results indicated that taste acuity after treatment completion in pediatric cancer patients was the same as that in healthy children. However, some treatment modalities were correlated with an impaired ability to taste salt. Gustatory test results should be considered while deciding nutritional support modalities after treatment completion in pediatric cancer patients.

Highlights

  • Taste acuity plays an important role in nutritional preference

  • Changes in taste acuity have been reported in adult patients with various disorders, including chronic renal failure treated by peritoneal dialysis [3], Parkinson’s disease [4], rheumatoid arthritis [5], and chronic hepatitis C [6]

  • To determine whether duration since treatment completion had an effect on taste acuity, we divided the patients into a group that had completed treatment 5 years back

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Summary

Introduction

In studies involving healthy populations, older age and male gender were identified as predictive factors for impaired taste acuity [1] [2]. Changes in taste acuity have been reported in adult patients with various disorders, including chronic renal failure treated by peritoneal dialysis [3], Parkinson’s disease [4], rheumatoid arthritis [5], and chronic hepatitis C [6]. Changes in taste acuity are common in adult cancer patients, presumably because of malnutrition and emotional stress caused by cancer and/or cancer treatment [7]. Taste acuity of cancer patients, during the period of chemotherapy or radiotherapy, has been extensively studied [8] [9]. The mechanisms underlying taste alterations in these patients have not been fully identified, several possibilities have been proposed, including direct injury to taste buds, damage to the nervous system after surgery or local anesthesia, alterations in saliva excretion, and zinc deficiency [14] [15]

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