Title of article :
Nutritional Status of Pediatric Patients with Cancer in Iran: A Single Center Study
Author/Authors :
Khajavi, Leila Department of Nutrition - School of Medical - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Farhangi, Hamid Department of Pediatric Hematology & Oncology - Faculty of Medicine - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Movahed, Sara Department of Nutrition - School of Medical - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Nejati Salehkhani, Fatemeh Department of Nutrition - School of Medical - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Norouzy, Abdolreza Department of Nutrition - School of Medical - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences
Abstract :
Background: As children have a higher metabolic rate and higher calorie needs
for growth, they are more susceptible to nutritional depletion than adults. We
aimed to assess the nutritional status of children with cancer who were referred
to the outpatient clinic of hematology and oncology clinic at Sheikh Children
Hospital, Mashhad, Iran.
Methods: The nutritional status of the children with cancer was assessed by
anthropometric indices and nutritional risk screening tool. We used BMI-forage
(BMIFA), height-for-age (HFA) and weight-for-height (WFH) to define
malnutrition. The anthropometric indices (BMIFA, HFA, and WFH) were
categorized according to z-scores. STRONGkids tool was applied for screening
risk of malnutrition.
Results: 61 pediatric patients with cancer were assessed. Of the studied patients,
77% were boys (47 patients) with a mean age of 8.4 years (6 months to18 years).
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) was the most prevalent cancer (64%).
26.2% of the patients had malnutrition according to BMI for age z-score index
(underweight), 24.5% according to weight for height (WFH) index (wasting) and
21.3% according to HFA index (stunting). The STRONGkids classified 34.4% of
patients as high risk, and 65.6% as moderate risk of malnutrition.
Conclusions: Malnutrition was prevalent among pediatric cancer patients in
this study, so appropriate nutritional screening and management should be
implemented for improving the nutritional status of children with cancer.
Keywords :
Nutritional status , Nutrition assessment , Pediatrics , Malignancy , Acute lymphoblastic leukemia , STRONGKids tool
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics