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Specialized Nutritional Support and Cancer
Journal article

Specialized Nutritional Support and Cancer

Abstract

Over a 7 1/2-year period, 94 cancer patients presenting considerable operative risk were managed by total parenteral nutrition (TPN). All were nutritionally depleted, had obstruction to the gastrointestinal tract or had postoperative complications such as enterocutaneous fistulas, evisceration or intra-abdominal sepsis, which left TPN as the only means of achieving anabolism. When TPN was started preoperatively and continued post-operatively (28 patients--Group 1), no deaths or significant complications occurred. When TPN was first started after life-threatening complications had occurred (58 patients--Group 2), the mortality was 17.2%, so that a high incidence of recovery was achieved. When TPN was used in inoperable cachectic patients (8 patients--Group 3) to enable them to tolerate radiotherapy or chemotherapy, the mortality was 37.5%. This latter group is small, but TPN is worthwhile in selected patients where significant palliation and improvement in the quality of life can occur. With careful technique, risk of sepsis with TPN was no greater than in noncancer patients.

Authors

Deitel M; Vasic V; Alexander M

Journal

Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, Vol. 2, No. 5, pp. 671–675

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

January 1, 1978

DOI

10.1177/014860717800200509

ISSN

0148-6071

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