AI Article Synopsis

  • * At the beginning of the study, most patients reported good HRQoL and were at risk of malnutrition, with a strong willingness to engage in exercise training.
  • * After undergoing radical chemoradiotherapy, patients showed significant declines in HRQoL, dysphagia severity, handgrip strength, and nutritional status, highlighting the need for supportive care like exercise training.

Article Abstract

Head and neck cancer (HNC) treatment's toxicities impact several health domains. Exercise training (ET) may be beneficial. This prospective observational study (NCT04996147) aimed to analyse the acute impact of HNC curative multimodal treatment on health-related quality of life (HRQoL), nutritional status, physical and cognitive functions, and ET preferences. Eighteen patients with stage III/IV HNC were evaluated at baseline (T0), and 10 patients were evaluated at the end of treatment (T1), 7 of them after radical chemoradiotherapy (rCRT). At T0, the majority referred a good HRQoL on the EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire (median score: 70.8), were moderately malnourished or at risk of malnutrition (78%), recognized the benefits of an ET program, and were willing to participate (78%). After rCRT, there was worsening in HRQoL (75 vs. 50 score, = 0.014), dysphagia severity (Eating Assessment Tool: 7 vs. 31, = 0.027; Functional Oral Intake Scale: 6 vs. 4, = 0.041), handgrip strength (dominant: 40.9 vs. 35.8 kgf, = 0.027; nondominant: 37.2 vs. 33.9 kgf, = 0.043), and nutritional status (Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment: 7 vs. 18, = 0.028). HNC patients subjected to radical treatment represent a vulnerable population that might benefit from multimodal supportive care strategies including an ET program.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9179562PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14112698DOI Listing

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