Feit Talia, Beals Elizabeth, Dandekar Smita, Kadan-Lottick Nina, Joffe Lenat
Division of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology and Stem Cell Transplantation, Cohen Children's Medical Center, Northwell Health, New Hyde Park, NY, United States.
Department of Pediatrics, Cohen Children's Medical Center, Northwell Health, New Hyde Park, NY, United States.
Front Nutr. 2024 Jan 31;10:1343104. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2023.1343104. eCollection 2023.
Over 85% of childhood cancer patients become long-term survivors. Still, cancer and its therapies are associated with a myriad of long-term complications such that childhood cancer survivors (CCS) endure excess disease burden, morbidity, and mortality throughout their lifetimes. Existing literature suggests that CCS maintain poor dietary intake and nutritional status. Thus, as childhood cancer cure rates continue to improve, the role of diet and nutrition in mitigating many of the most common adverse long-term health outcomes among CCS has gained significant interest. Herein we present an in-depth review of existing scientific literature evaluating dietary intake and nutrition status among CCS and its impact on treatment-related health complications; as well as contemporary intervention strategies aimed at overcoming distinctive barriers and improving deleterious lifestyle behaviors in this heterogeneous, at-risk population. Patient-specific, clinical, and systemic factors act as barriers to the timely conduct of comprehensive dietary/nutritional assessments and provision of tailored, risk-based recommendations. This Mini Review discusses the current state of the science, persisting research gaps, and opportunities for advancement of assessment and intervention strategies to address the unique needs of CCS. Search Strategy: We searched PubMed for peer-reviewed articles with the search terms "pediatric cancer," "pediatric malignancy," "pediatric oncology," "childhood cancer," "survivorship," "cancer late effects," "long-term follow-up," "body mass index," "nutritional status," "malnutrition," "body weight," "body weight changes," "body composition," "obesity," "overweight ", "Mediterranean diet," "DASH diet," "processed foods," "micronutrients," "antioxidants," "vitamin D," "calcium," "selenium," "zinc," "metabolic syndrome," "heart disease," "cardiovascular disease," "cardiometabolic disease," "hypertension," "hyperlipidemia," "HDL," "LDL," and "small dense LDL" from January 1, 1995, to July 21, 2023. We also selected relevant articles from our personal files and from reference lists of identified papers. We prioritized publications after 2013; however, commonly cited and highly regarded (defined by high citation count and journal impact factor) older publications were also included. Randomized controlled trials, observational studies, retrospective studies, meta-analysis, editorials, and review articles were included, whereas conference abstracts and case reports were excluded. We only searched for articles published in English, or those translated into English.
超过85%的儿童癌症患者成为长期幸存者。然而,癌症及其治疗方法与众多长期并发症相关,以至于儿童癌症幸存者(CCS)在其一生中承受着额外的疾病负担、发病率和死亡率。现有文献表明,CCS的饮食摄入量和营养状况较差。因此,随着儿童癌症治愈率的不断提高,饮食和营养在减轻CCS中许多最常见的长期不良健康后果方面的作用引起了人们的极大兴趣。在此,我们对现有科学文献进行深入综述,评估CCS的饮食摄入量和营养状况及其对治疗相关健康并发症的影响;以及当代干预策略,旨在克服独特障碍并改善这一异质性高危人群中有害的生活方式行为。患者特异性、临床和系统因素成为及时进行全面饮食/营养评估以及提供量身定制的、基于风险的建议的障碍。本小型综述讨论了当前的科学现状、持续存在的研究差距以及推进评估和干预策略以满足CCS独特需求的机会。检索策略:我们在PubMed上搜索同行评审文章,搜索词为“儿科癌症”“儿科恶性肿瘤”“儿科肿瘤学”“儿童癌症”“幸存者”“癌症后期影响”“长期随访”“体重指数”“营养状况”“营养不良”“体重”“体重变化”“身体成分”“肥胖”“超重”“地中海饮食”“得舒饮食”“加工食品”“微量营养素”“抗氧化剂”“维生素D”“钙”“硒”“锌”“代谢综合征”“心脏病”“心血管疾病”“心脏代谢疾病”“高血压”“高脂血症”“高密度脂蛋白”“低密度脂蛋白”和“小而密低密度脂蛋白”,时间范围为1995年1月1日至2023年7月21日。我们还从个人文件和已识别论文的参考文献列表中选择了相关文章。我们优先考虑2013年以后的出版物;然而,也纳入了被广泛引用且备受推崇(以高引用次数和期刊影响因子定义)的旧出版物。纳入随机对照试验、观察性研究、回顾性研究、荟萃分析、社论和综述文章,而排除会议摘要和病例报告。我们只搜索以英文发表的文章,或已翻译成英文的文章。