Manduchi Beatrice, Sandulache Vlad C, Tark Ji Yun, Sharma Shreela, Li Ruosha, Roller Emily, Bevelhimer Andrew, Hutcheson Katherine A, de Oliveira Otto Marcia C
Department of Epidemiology, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston School of Public Health, Houston, Texas, USA.
Department of Head and Neck Surgery, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, USA.
Head Neck. 2025 Jun 2. doi: 10.1002/hed.28206.
Diet quality is a modifiable factor impacting treatment outcomes in oropharyngeal cancer (OPC), yet the effect of dysphagia and self-reported eating-related symptoms remains unclear. This study examined their associations with diet quality in OPC patients.
A cross-sectional analysis was conducted with two parallel cohorts from MD Anderson Cancer Center and Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center as part of the Uncovering the Long-Term Impact of OPC and Dysphagia on Dietary Quality and Nutrition Among Cancer Survivors (U-DINE) Study. Participants at varying survivorship stages (prediagnosis, 3-6 and 18+ months posttreatment) were assessed for dysphagia (DIGEST scale) and six individual eating-related symptoms (MDASI-HN). Diet quality was measured using HEI-2020 scores from two 24-h dietary recalls.
Among 178 survivors, mean HEI-2020 was 49.5 ± 11.3. In multivariable models, moderate-severe dysphagia (18.5% of the sample) was associated with higher diet quality (β = 7.11, p = 0.004), while eating-related symptoms showed no significant association.
Unexpectedly, poor swallowing function correlated with better diet quality. However, overall diet quality was suboptimal, highlighting the need for interventions for all OPC survivors, regardless of swallowing function, to address diet quality as an independent risk factor throughout survivorship.
饮食质量是影响口咽癌(OPC)治疗效果的一个可改变因素,但吞咽困难和自我报告的饮食相关症状的影响仍不明确。本研究调查了它们与OPC患者饮食质量的关联。
作为“揭示OPC和吞咽困难对癌症幸存者饮食质量和营养的长期影响”(U-DINE)研究的一部分,对来自MD安德森癌症中心和迈克尔·E·德巴基退伍军人事务医疗中心的两个平行队列进行了横断面分析。对处于不同生存阶段(诊断前、治疗后3 - 6个月和18个月以上)的参与者进行吞咽困难评估(DIGEST量表)和六种个体饮食相关症状评估(MDASI-HN)。饮食质量通过两次24小时饮食回忆的HEI-2020评分来衡量。
在178名幸存者中,HEI-2020的平均值为49.5±11.3。在多变量模型中,中度至重度吞咽困难(占样本的18.5%)与更高的饮食质量相关(β = 7.11,p = 0.004),而饮食相关症状未显示出显著关联。
出乎意料的是,吞咽功能差与更好的饮食质量相关。然而,总体饮食质量并不理想,这突出表明所有OPC幸存者,无论吞咽功能如何,都需要进行干预,以将饮食质量作为整个生存期间的一个独立风险因素来解决。