masterThesis
Toxicidade em pacientes com câncer no trato gastrointestinal durante a quimioterapia: associações com Sarcopenia e Caquexia
Fecha
2018-07-09Registro en:
ROCHA, Ilanna Marques Gomes da. Toxicidade em pacientes com câncer no trato gastrointestinal durante a quimioterapia: associações com Sarcopenia e Caquexia. 2018. 61f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Nutrição) - Centro de Ciências da Saúde, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2018.
Autor
Rocha, Ilanna Marques Gomes da
Resumen
Chemotherapy is a systemic treatment of great relevance for cancer patients;
however, it can lead to a series of adverse events, called toxicities. In the
evaluation of nutritional status, sarcopenia and cachexia have been associated
with several unfavorable prognoses in cancer, such as increased toxicity during
chemotherapy. Thus, the objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of
cachexia and sarcopenia on the occurrence of toxicities in patients during the
first three cycles of chemotherapeutic treatment for gastrointestinal cancer. A
prospective study was conducted with patients starting the first cycle of
chemotherapy. Haematological and gastrointestinal toxicity and the presence of
a dose limiting toxicity (DLT) were assessed according to the NCI Common
Toxicity Criteria. Functional capacity was evaluated using dynamometry and the
performance scale ECOG. Sarcopenia and muscle attenuation was assessed
using skeletal muscle index with computed tomography by measuring crosssectional
areas of the L3 portion (cm2
/m2
) and classification according to
specific cutoff points. Diagnosis of cachexia was performed according to the
current consensus, based on involuntary weight loss in the absence of anorexia
associated, with presence of sarcopenia. To examine associations between
sarcopenia, cachexia, nutritional status and functional capacity with DLT we
used univariate and multivariate regression. The associations were tested and
statistical significance was considered when p <0.05. In results, sixty (60)
patients were evaluated, with a higher prevalence of males (55%) and mean
age of 60 years. At baseline, the majority of the participants presented
adequate nutritional status and good functional capacity (85%) for ECOG.
During chemotherapy, sarcopenic patients had significantly higher degrees of
toxicity for anorexia (p = 0.045), nausea (p = 0.044), and leukopenia (0.036). In
cachetics, significant levels of toxicities were found for nausea (p = 0.026) and
anorexia (0.013 and 0.028 in the first and second cycles, respectively). In
multivariate analysis including the only factor associated with DLT was cachexia
and ECOG Scale. In conclusion, cachexia and ECOG were parameters predict
risk factor for severe toxicity events in patients with gastrointestinal cancer
during chemotherapy.