# Comparative effects of oral nutritional supplementation vs. nutritional education on appetite and weight in older adults with anorexia of aging: a 12-week non-randomized controlled trial

**Authors:** Gaojie Feng, Chen Liu, Xiaohong Sun, Xiaohong Liu, Fei Lu, Yuanyuan Li, Yaru Zhou

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2025.1606008 · Frontiers in Nutrition · 2025-05-20

## TL;DR

This study compared oral nutritional supplements and diet education for improving appetite in older adults with anorexia of aging in China, finding that supplements worked faster but neither improved weight or physical function.

## Contribution

The study provides new evidence on the comparative efficacy of ONS and diet education for anorexia of aging in Chinese older adults.

## Key findings

- Oral nutritional supplements improved appetite scores faster than diet education.
- Neither intervention significantly improved weight or physical function outcomes.
- Diet education increased grip strength at week 12.

## Abstract

With global aging, diet education and oral nutritional supplements (ONS) are recognized for improving nutrition and appetite in older adults, yet evidence on anorexia of aging (AA) mechanisms and interventions remains limited in China. This study aimed to evaluate diet education and ONS efficacy for AA in Chinese community-dwelling older adults.

In an open-label, non-randomized controlled trial, 64 eligible participants were allocated to an ONS group (supplementation) or a diet education group. The Simplified Nutritional Appetite Questionnaire (SNAQ) assessed AA, with follow-ups at weeks 2, 4, 8, and 12. Primary outcomes were SNAQ improvements; secondary outcomes included weight, grip strength, nutritional status (BMI, MNA-SF), cognition (MMSE), mobility (SPPB), mental health (GDS15), and quality of life (EQ-5D).

Younger, non-solo-living, and malnourished participants preferred ONS intervention (p < 0.05). Both groups showed increased SNAQ scores versus baseline (counseling: weeks 4/8/12; ONS: weeks 2/4/8/12), with ONS achieving significantly greater improvement at week 2 (p < 0.05). Weight remained unchanged in both groups (p > 0.05). Diet education increased grip strength at week 12 (p < 0.05), while no significant improvements occurred in BMI, cognition, mobility, or quality of life.

Both ONS and diet education alleviated AA over 12 weeks, but ONS demonstrated earlier efficacy (significant SNAQ improvement by week 2). However, ONS did not enhance weight, physical function, or cognitive outcomes.

Approved by Peking Union Medical College Hospital Ethics Committee (I-23PJ661), registered at Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (MR-11-23-023104).

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** malnourished (MESH:D044342), AA (MESH:D000855)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

35 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12129750/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12129750