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Nutritional status of children during treatment for acute lymphoblastic leukemia in Guatemala
Authors:Federico Antillon MD  MMM   PhD  Emanuela Rossi PhD  Ana Lucia Molina RD  Alessandra Sala MD  PhD  Paul Pencharz MD  PhD  Maria Grazia Valsecchi PhD  Ronald Barr MB ChB  MD
Affiliation:1. Unidad Nacional de Oncologia Pediatrica, Guatemala City, Guatemala;2. Department of Clinical Medicine and Prevention, University of Milano‐Bicocca, Monza, Italy;3. Department of Pediatrics, University of Milano‐Bicocca, Monza, Italy;4. Hospital for Sick Children and University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada;5. Departments of Pediatrics, Pathology and Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada
Abstract:

Background

Most children with cancer live in developing countries where the prevalence of malnutrition may reach 50% and influence the course of the disease. This study examined the prevalence and severity of malnutrition at diagnosis, as well as after 3 and 6 months of chemotherapy, in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in Guatemala.

Methods

Triceps skin fold thickness (TSFT) and mid upper arm circumference (MUAC) provided measures of nutritional status (NS) in three categories: adequately nourished (A): TSFT and MUAC > 10th percentile; severely depleted (SD): TSFT or MUAC < 5th percentile; and moderately depleted (MD): all the remaining patients.

Results

Of 331 new patients, 241 had NS assessed at diagnosis. A = 113 (46.9%); MD = 28 (11.6%); SD = 100 (41.5%). At 3 months A = 106 (52.2%); MD = 25 (12.3%); SD = 72 (35.5%). At 6 months A = 146 (76.0%); MD = 12 (6.3%); SD = 34 (17.7%). In multivariate analysis, SD children at 6 months of treatment had a hazard of death that was 2.4‐fold the hazard of those A or MD (95% CI: 1.3–4.7)

Conclusions

Malnutrition is prevalent in newly diagnosed children with ALL in Guatemala and severe nutritional depletion is apparently predictive of abandonment of therapy and relapse of disease, but if children survive and improve their NS in the first 6 months after diagnosis, their chances of survival may improve significantly to approximate those in children not presenting with nutritional depletion. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2013; 60: 911–915. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:acute lymphoblastic leukemia  children  nutrition
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