1.
The Effect of Nutrition Intervention with Oral Nutritional Supplements on Pancreatic and Bile Duct Cancer Patients Undergoing Chemotherapy.
Kim, SH, Lee, SM, Jeung, HC, Lee, IJ, Park, JS, Song, M, Lee, DK, Lee, SM
Nutrients. 2019;11(5)
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Despite the advantages of chemotherapy, it can cause cancer-related malnutrition leading to both reduced quality of life and reduced survival rate. Oral nutritional supplements (ONSs) provide balanced nutrients, calories, and protein to complement insufficient oral intake, and ONS provision during treatment may improve nutritional status. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of ONS on nutritional status in patients undergoing chemotherapy for pancreatic and bile duct cancer. Patients were randomly allocated to the ONS group (15) and non-ONS group (19) and dietary intake and body weight were assessed at weeks 1, 2, 4 and 8. Body composition and quality of life was assessed at baseline and week 8. This study found the supply of ONS helped promote health by increasing body fat mass, improving quality of life and decreasing fatigue symptoms in pancreatic and bile duct cancer patients. These results were more pronounced in patients in the first cycle of chemotherapy. Based on these results, the authors conclude ONS may improve nutritional status by increasing fat mass and/or maintaining the body composition of patients undergoing chemotherapy.
Abstract
Chemotherapy may negatively affect nutritional status and quality of life (QOL) in pancreatic cancer patients. Our aim was to investigate the beneficial effects of oral nutrition supplements (ONS) on pancreatic and bile duct cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy. Among patients with progressive pancreatic and bile duct cancer receiving chemotherapy, the ONS group (n = 15) received two packs of ONS daily for 8 weeks while the non-ONS group (n = 19) did not. Anthropometric measures, dietary intake, nutritional status, and quality of life were assessed. ONS significantly increased daily intakes of energy, carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids at 8 weeks compared to the baseline. After 8 weeks, fat mass significantly increased in the ONS group. For patients in their first cycle of chemotherapy, body weight, fat-free mass, skeletal muscle mass, body cell mass, and fat mass increased in the ONS group but decreased in the non-ONS group. Fat mass increased in second or higher cycle only in the ONS group. Patient-generated subjective global assessments (PG-SGA) and fatigue scores in the Quality of Life Questionnaire Core 30 (QLQ-C30) improved in the ONS group. ONS might improve nutritional status by increasing fat mass and/or maintaining the body composition of pancreatic and bile duct cancer patients with chemotherapy, especially those in the first cycle, and alleviate fatigue symptoms.
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Reversing the immune ageing clock: lifestyle modifications and pharmacological interventions.
Duggal, NA
Biogerontology. 2018;19(6):481-496
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Advancing age is accompanied by a compromised ability of older adults to combat bacterial and viral infections, increased risk of autoimmunity, poor vaccination responses and the re-emergence of latent infections. This review discusses current understanding of immunesenescence [the gradual deterioration of our immune system as we get older] and also focuses on lifestyle interventions and therapeutic strategies that have been shown to restore immune functioning in aged individuals. Findings show that: - changes in nutrition and lifestyle can be an effective approach towards improving immune outcome in older adults but may be hard to achieve at a population level. - improving immune responses, such as the developments of vaccines, may be used as an early biomarker for anti-ageing effects. Authors conclude that immunomodulation represents a promising therapeutic approach to improve the health of older adults.
Abstract
It is widely accepted that ageing is accompanied by remodelling of the immune system, including reduced numbers of naïve T cells, increased senescent or exhausted T cells, compromise to monocyte, neutrophil and natural killer cell function and an increase in systemic inflammation. In combination these changes result in increased risk of infection, reduced immune memory, reduced immune tolerance and immune surveillance, with significant impacts upon health in old age. More recently it has become clear that the rate of decline in the immune system is malleable and can be influenced by environmental factors such as physical activity as well as pharmacological interventions. This review discusses briefly our current understanding of immunesenescence and then focuses on lifestyle interventions and therapeutic strategies that have been shown to restore immune functioning in aged individuals.