Nutrition Support Using the American Dietetic Association Medical Nutrition Therapy Protocol for Radiation Oncology Patients Improves Dietary Intake Compared with Standard Practice
Abstract
Background
A randomized controlled trial previously conducted in radiation oncology patients demonstrated that nutrition intervention had a beneficial impact on body weight, nutritional status, and quality of life compared with standard practice, but it did not report on dietary intake data.
Objective
To determine the impact of nutrition intervention compared with standard practice on dietary intake in outpatients receiving radiotherapy.
Design
Prospective, randomized, controlled trial.
Subjects
Sixty consecutive radiation oncology outpatients (51 men and nine women; age 61.9±14 years [mean±standard deviation]).
Setting
Australian private radiotherapy facility.
Intervention
Patients were randomly assigned to receive either nutrition intervention (n=29) (nutrition counseling following the American Dietetic Association [ADA] medical nutrition therapy [MNT] protocol for radiation oncology) or standard practice (n=31) (general nutrition talk and booklet).
Main Outcome Measure
Dietary intake (protein, energy, fiber) assessed at baseline and at 4, 8, and 12 weeks after starting radiotherapy.
Statistical Analyses
Repeated-measures analysis of variance done on an intention to treat basis.
Results
The nutrition intervention group had a higher mean total energy (P=0.029) and protein intake (P<0.001) compared with the standard practice group. Mean intake per kilogram of body weight for the nutrition intervention group ranged from 28 to 31 kcal/kg/day compared with 25 to 29 kcal/kg/day for the standard practice group (P=0.022). The nutrition intervention group had a higher mean protein intake (1.1 to 1.3 g/kg/day) compared with the standard practice group (1.0 to 1.1 g/kg/day) (P=0.001). Although the change in fiber intake between the groups was not significant, there was a trend in the anticipated direction (P=0.083).
Conclusions
Intensive nutrition intervention following the ADA MNT protocol results in improved dietary intake compared with standard practice and seems to beneficially impact nutrition-related outcomes previously observed in oncology outpatients receiving radiotherapy. The ADA MNT protocol for radiation oncology is a useful guide to the level of nutrition support required.
Address correspondence to: Elisabeth A. Isenring, PhD, AdvAPD(Aus), National Health and Medical Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow, Institute for Health and Biomedical Innovation and School of Public Health, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD 4059 Australia.