# The Effect of the Number of Adjuvant Chemotherapy Cycles Following Cancer Surgery on Taste Alteration, Energy Intake, and Life Quality: 6-Month Follow-Up Study

**Authors:** Can Selim Yilmaz, Hilal Caliskan İzgi, Perim Fatma Türker

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/life15071031 · Life · 2025-06-28

## TL;DR

More chemotherapy cycles after cancer surgery worsen taste changes and quality of life, but these effects often improve within 6 months.

## Contribution

Shows how chemotherapy cycle count affects taste, nutrition, and quality of life in cancer patients over 6 months.

## Key findings

- Patients receiving ≥4 chemotherapy cycles had greater taste alterations compared to those receiving <4 cycles.
- Quality of life scores were lower in patients receiving ≥4 cycles but improved within 6 months.
- Taste alterations correlated with weight loss and reduced energy intake in the short term.

## Abstract

This study aimed to investigate the effect of the number of adjuvant chemotherapy cycles on taste alteration, energy intake, and life quality. This study was conducted with 87 adult patients with newly diagnosed early-stage cancer, treated by surgery and receiving adjuvant chemotherapy (two groups received <4 and ≥4 cycles). Taste alteration was assessed with the Chemotherapy-induced Taste Alteration Scale, and life quality with the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy. Patients who received ≥4 cycles showed significantly higher “Decline in Basic Taste”, “Phantogeusia and Parageusia”, and “General Taste Alterations” subscale scores at the end of treatment (d = 0.945, d = 1.200, d = 0.928, respectively; p < 0.001) and 3 months later (d = 0.515, d = 0.605, d = 0.985, respectively; p < 0.05). Quality of life scale total score and “physical well-being” and “functional well-being” subscale scores were significantly lower in patients received ≥4 cycle at the end of treatment (d = 0.590, d = 0.500, d = 0.621, respectively; p < 0.05) and 3 months later (d = 0.500, d = 0.516, d = 0.562, respectively; p < 0.05) but improved within 6 months. Significant correlations were found between taste alterations and recent weight loss, affordability of energy requirements, and decreased quality of life. A higher number of adjuvant chemotherapy cycles was associated with greater taste alterations, nutritional challenges and lower quality of life, especially in the early post-treatment. These changes are often transient and tend to return to baseline levels within 3–6 months after treatment.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** cancer (MONDO:0004992)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Cancer (MESH:D009369), Parageusia (MESH:D004408), weight loss (MESH:D015431)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

61 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12298385/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12298385