Breast Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Evaluation of Eating Habits and Dysgeusia During Chemotherapy Treatment: a Prospective Cohort Study on Patients Affected by Breast Cancer
In post-menopause women affected by breast cancer and treated with chemotherapy, overweight and obesity are considered both a risk factors as well as a negative prognostic factors since they increase the risk of early relapse and death. Furthermore, a decrease in weight may also occur during chemotherapy and is associated to a reduced quality of life and survival. Also, the majority of patients under chemotherapy refer dysgeusia, an alteration in taste that can determine food aversion, selection of hypercaloric food or reduced food introduction up to malnutrition. Our aim is to evaluate eating habits changes in patients affected by breast cancer and under chemotherapy treatment and to better understand how this alterations influence the quality of life, anxiety, depression and insomnia of patients as well as overall survival.
INTRODUCTION
Overweight and obesity represent a risk factor for hormone dependent cancers such as breast,
endometrium, ovarian, uterine and gastrointestinal cancer.
In particular, overweight and obesity are risk factors for breast cancer in post-menopause
women since they are associated to higher level of circulating estrogens, insulin,
insulin-like growth factor levels, leptin, adiponectin, growth factors (such as hepatocyte
growth factor) and inflammatory cytokines (TNFα and Interleukin-6 (IL-6)). Moreover, they
reduce sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) plasma levels. Overweight and obesity are also
negative prognostic factors for breast cancer in post-menopause women since they increase the
risk of early relapse and death. An increased weight (2.5-6.2 Kg) is commonly reported during
chemotherapy treatment in post-menopause women. This is due to increased appetite,
hyperphagia and hydric retention associated with reduced metabolism and physic activities.
However, the weight gain during therapy is still not recognised as a negative prognostic
factor.
Furthermore, a decrease in weight may also occur during chemotherapy. This is mainly due to
lower appetite and early satiety, dysgeusia, nausea and vomiting or intolerance to certain
foods. Decreasing weight can determine less efficacy and tolerance in therapy, more
complications/infections, more and longer hospitalisations and, as a consequence, a reduced
quality of life and survival.
Dysgeusia is an alteration in taste that can determine food aversion, selection of
hypercaloric food or reduced food introduction up to malnutrition. More than 75% of patients
under chemotherapy refer dysgeusia; this is related to drugs (such as folic acid competitors,
cyclophosphamide cisplatin and taxanes) and can last for weeks. ln particular, taxanes
determine a peripheral nerves degeneration. The results are a metallic taste and an
alteration in salted perception. In addition, they determine a dose-dependent
chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) with painful paraesthesia, total areflexia
and muscular extremities weakness. Dysgeusia is an underestimated problem. Instrumental
examinations and laboratory tests can be useful but they cannot replace a detailed medical
history and a close physical examination associated with international validate
questionnaires.
At the moment, no agreement was found on chemotherapy-induced dysgeusia prevention and
therapy. Patients resolve this problems with cold food, candies before meals and sugary
drinks and these behaviours lead to increasing in weight.
STUDY DESIGN
This is a prospective cohort study for the evaluation of eating habits changes and dysgeusia
in patients with breast cancer during chemotherapy treatment. It will explore also the
potential relations with anxiety, depression, insomnia and quality of life. These evaluations
will be actuated using internationally validate questionnaires.
METHODS
This study is based on the collection of data with international validate questionnaires:
- Food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) and photography atlas
- Chemotherapy-induced taste alteration scale (CiTAS): evaluation of changes in taste.
- Functional assessment of cancer therapy (FACT_B): evaluation of quality of life for
physical health, social and familiar health, emotional health, functional health and
health in relation with the pathology.
- Beck depression inventory (BDI) and HADS: evaluation of depression presence and its
intensity.
- Pittsburgh sleep quality index (PSQI) and insomnia severity index (ISI): evaluation of
sleep quality.
- State and trait anxiety inventory (STAI-Y): evaluation of anxiety presence and its
intensity.
STATISTICAL CONSIDERATIONS
Based on the proportion of the women in overweight before chemotherapy is 30% and the
proportion of the women in overweight after chemotherapy is 50% (with a 5% α error and an 80%
strength), the established number of patients to include in the study is 186. In prevision of
a 10% loss of patients in follow-up, 204 patients will be included in the study.
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