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A dietitian-led clinic for patients receiving (chemo)radiotherapy for head and neck cancer

journal contribution
posted on 2012-09-01, 00:00 authored by Nicole KissNicole Kiss, M Krishnasamy, J Loeliger, A Granados, G Dutu, J Corry
PURPOSE: Malnutrition is prevalent in head and neck cancer patients and is associated with poorer outcomes and increased health care costs. This study aimed to evaluate the acceptability, organisational efficiency and clinical outcomes of a dietitian-led head and neck cancer clinic. METHODS: Two consecutive, independent, patient cohorts were studied with a pre-post-test design of 98 patients prior to the introduction of a dietitian-led clinic (DLC) and the subsequent 100 patients who attended the newly formulated DLC. The two groups were compared for frequency of dietitian intervention, weight loss, enteral feeding, hospital admissions and post-treatment medical follow-up requirements. RESULTS: Nutritional management in a DLC was associated with reduced nutrition-related admissions from 12% to 4.5% (p = 0.0029), unplanned nasogastric tube insertions from 75% to 39% (p = 0.02), improved transition to oral diet post-radiotherapy from 68.3% to 76.7% (p = 0.10) and reduced radiation oncologist review at 2 weeks post-radiotherapy from 32% to 15% patients (p = 0.009) compared to the cohort prior to the DLC. CONCLUSIONS: A dietitian-led head and neck cancer clinic is associated with improved efficiency and nutritional management of head and neck cancer patients and offers a feasible model of care.

History

Journal

Supportive Care in Cancer

Volume

20

Issue

9

Pagination

2111 - 2120

Publisher

Springer-Verlag

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

0941-4355

eISSN

1433-7339

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Springer-Verlag