Abstract

BackgroundThis study was sought to report the prevalence of malnutrition in elderly patients with cancer. Validate the predictive value of the nutritional assessment tool (Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment Short Form, PG-SGA SF) for clinical outcomes and assist the therapeutic decision.MethodsThis is a secondary analysis of a multicentric, observational cohort study. Elderly patients with cancer older than 65 years were enrolled after the first admission. Nutritional status was identified using the PG-SGA SF.ResultsOf the 2724 elderly patients included in the analysis, 65.27% of patients were male (n = 1778); the mean age was 71.00 ± 5.36 years. 31.5% of patients were considered malnourished according to PG-SGA SF. In multivariate analysis, malnutrition(PG-SGA SF > 5) was significantly associated with worse OS (HR: 1.47,95%CI:1.29–1.68), affects the quality of life, and was related to more frequent nutrition impact symptoms. During a median follow-up of 4.5 years, 1176 death occurred. The mortality risk was 41.10% for malnutrition during the first 12 months and led to a rate of 323.98 events per-1000-patient-years. All nutritional assessment tools were correlated with each other (PG-SGA SF vs. PG-SGA: r = 0.98; PG-SGA SF vs. GLIM[Global Leadership Initiative on Malnutrition]: r = 0.48, all P < 0.05). PG-SGA SF and PG-SGA performed similarly to predict mortality but better than GLIM. PG-SGA SF improves the predictive ability of the TNM classification system for mortality in elderly patients with cancer, including distinguishing patients’ prognoses and directing immunotherapy.ConclusionsThe nutritional status as measured by PG-SGA SF which is a prognostic factor for OS in elderly cancer patients and could improve the prognostic model of TNM.

Highlights

  • This study was sought to report the prevalence of malnutrition in elderly patients with cancer

  • All nutritional assessment tools were correlated with each other (PG-SGA SF vs. Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment (PG-SGA): r = 0.98; Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment (PGSGA) SF vs. Global Leadership Initiative on Malnutrition (GLIM): r = 0.48; PG-SGA vs. GLIM: r = 0.5)

  • In conclusion, our study showed that the PG-SGA SF is strongly correlated with outcomes in elderly patients with cancer

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Summary

Introduction

This study was sought to report the prevalence of malnutrition in elderly patients with cancer. Understanding nutritional status in elderly patients with cancer is essential to therapeutic decisions and their survival [4]. Nutritional status is closely associated with the survival and treatment of cancer patients [7]. In the past few years, one of the critical measures for improving the comprehensive clinical treatment for elderly patients with cancer is the nutritional assessment [8]. Previous studies demonstrated a significant association between nutritional state and risk of death in elderly patients with cancer in the geriatric oncology setting. This affects only during the first few years after diagnosis [11]. When estimating the clinical outcome in cancer patients, various nutritionrelated factors, in addition to the current TNM staging system, should be considered

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