Abstract

This study aimed to: (1) externally validate the Visual/Verbal Analogue Scale of food ingesta (ingesta-VVAS) that previously showed good discrimination between oncology patients who ingest more or less energy than required; (2) explore the discriminative properties of other questions. Dietitians performed 322 interviews in 206 adult oncology patients undergoing chemotherapy in two Dutch hospitals, including a 24-h dietary recall, assessment of the ingesta-VVAS and 12 additional questions related to reduced food intake. The ingesta-VVAS score was linearly associated with energy intake as % of Total Energy Expenditure (TEE) (standardized beta = 0.39, p < 0.001), with no differences between groups based on use of oral nutritional supplements, body mass index, in/outpatient setting or sex. The accuracy of the ingesta-VVAS score to predict low energy intake (<75% of TEE) was poor (Area Under the Receiver Operating Characteristic curve (AUC) = 0.668, 95% CI 0.603–0.733). The optimal multivariate model included the ingesta-VVAS score and a question on ‘feeling sick’ (AUC = 0.680, 95% CI 0.615–0.746). In conclusion, in our study the ingesta-VVAS discriminates poorly between oncology patients undergoing chemotherapy who ingest more or less energy than required. Adding a question on feeling sick only slightly improved model performance. Further external validation is warranted.

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