Diet Quality Is Not Associated with Malnutrition, Low Muscle Mass and Sarcopenia During Lung Cancer Treatment: A Cross-Sectional Study
Annie R. Curtis, Nicole Kiss, Robin M. Daly, Gavin Abbott, Anna Ugalde, Katherine M. Livingstone

TL;DR
This study found that diet quality in lung cancer patients was not linked to malnutrition, low muscle mass, or sarcopenia during treatment.
Contribution
The study is among the first to explore the relationship between diet quality and muscle-related outcomes in lung cancer patients.
Findings
Diet quality was not significantly associated with malnutrition, low muscle mass, or sarcopenia.
Overall diet quality among participants was poor.
Further research is needed to determine the role of diet in nutritional interventions for cancer patients.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Studies evaluating the impact of diet quality on nutrition- and muscle-related outcomes in cancer are limited. This study aimed to understand the diet quality of people with lung cancer and its cross-sectional associations with malnutrition, low muscle mass and (probable)-sarcopenia. Methods: Three-day food records were collected from 47 adults (mean ± SD age 70.6 ± 8.6 years; 58% male) with lung cancer prior to, or within one week, of curative-intent (chemo)radiotherapy. Dietary Guidelines Index (DGI-2013) and Mediterranean Diet Score (MDS) estimated diet quality, reflecting established healthy eating patterns. Malnutrition was determined using Patient Generated Subjective Global Assessment (PG-SGA). Low muscle mass was estimated using diagnostic third lumbar vertebra computed tomography (CT) images. (Probable)-sarcopenia was determined using the revised European…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNutrition and Health in Aging · Nutritional Studies and Diet · Frailty in Older Adults
