A Pilot Study of Nutritional Supplementation in Soft Tissue Sarcoma Patients.

The Iowa orthopaedic journal Pub Date : 2023-12-01
Mike Russell, Steven Leary, Nathan E Saxby, Natalie Glass, Benjamin J Miller
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Abstract

Background: Wound healing is particularly important for sarcoma patients who undergo neoadjuvant radiation therapy. Previous studies have demonstrated wound complications in this population approaching 35%. With this high rate of wound healing issues, identifying treatment modalities to minimize these complications is of paramount importance.

Methods: All patients with high grade bone and soft tissue sarcoma received 15 days of twice daily amino acid supplementation starting in the immediate post-operative period. We documented the healing status of the surgical wound, the primary outcome, at all follow up appointments until six months after surgery. Non-healing wounds were defined as any wound requiring 1) a return visit to the OR for debridement, 2) IV antibiotics (ABX), and 3) unhealed wounds at 6 months post-operatively.1 For each patient, we collected biometrics with lean body mass analysis at preoperative appointment, and two and six weeks postoperatively. The proportion with non-healing wounds was compared with a historical patient cohort using the chi-square test. In a subgroup of participants with body composition measurements, we also compared changes in mean fat mass, lean mass, and psoas index from pre-operative baseline to 6 months post-operative using generalized linear models.

Results: A total of 33 consecutive patients were supplemented with a branched chain amino acid (BCAA) formulation. The historical cohort included 146 participants from the previous 7 years (2010-2017). 26% of patients in the historical cohort experienced wound complications compared to 30% in the supplemented group. (p=0.72) When focusing specifically on lower extremity sarcomas treated with neoadjuvant radiation therapy, 46% of patients in the supplemented group experienced wound healing complications compared to 39% in the non-supplemented group (p=0.68). BCAA supplementation was found to be protective with regards to decreasing muscle wasting with no difference in psoas index measurements throughout the study period compared to a 20% muscle loss in the historical cohort (p=0.02).

Conclusion: In our limited sample size, there was no difference in wound healing complications between sarcoma patients who received postoperative BCAA supplementation compared to a historical cohort who were not supplemented. Patients who did not receive supplementation had a significant decline in post-operative psoas index following operative sarcoma removal. Level of Evidence: III.

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软组织肉瘤患者营养补充试点研究
背景:伤口愈合对于接受新辅助放疗的肉瘤患者尤为重要。以往的研究表明,这类患者的伤口并发症发生率接近 35%。由于伤口愈合问题的发生率如此之高,因此确定治疗方法以尽量减少这些并发症至关重要:方法:所有高级别骨与软组织肉瘤患者从术后立即开始接受为期 15 天、每天两次的氨基酸补充治疗。我们在术后 6 个月前的所有随访中记录了手术伤口的愈合情况,这是主要结果。未愈合伤口的定义是:1)需要再次到手术室清创的伤口;2)需要静脉注射抗生素(ABX)的伤口;3)术后 6 个月仍未愈合的伤口1。使用卡方检验将伤口未愈合的比例与历史患者队列进行比较。我们还使用广义线性模型比较了有身体成分测量结果的亚组参与者从术前基线到术后 6 个月的平均脂肪量、瘦肉量和腰肌指数的变化:共有 33 名连续接受治疗的患者补充了支链氨基酸 (BCAA) 配方。历史队列包括过去 7 年(2010-2017 年)中的 146 名参与者。历史队列中有 26% 的患者出现了伤口并发症,而补充组中的这一比例为 30%。(P=0.72)当特别关注接受新辅助放疗的下肢肉瘤时,补充剂组中有46%的患者出现伤口愈合并发症,而未补充剂组中有39%的患者出现伤口愈合并发症(P=0.68)。研究发现,补充BCAA对减少肌肉萎缩具有保护作用,在整个研究期间,腰肌指数测量结果无差异,而历史队列中的肌肉萎缩率为20%(P=0.02):在我们有限的样本量中,术后补充 BCAA 的肉瘤患者与未补充 BCAA 的历史队列相比,在伤口愈合并发症方面没有差异。未补充营养的患者在肉瘤切除术后腰肌指数显著下降。证据等级:III.
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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