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Quality of Life and Functionality of Head and Neck Cancer Patients Are Diminished As a Function of Sarcopenia and Obesity

Health-related quality of life (QoL) is a measure that allows us to know the patient's perception of well-being and how it is affected by their disease and treatments. In cancer patients, sarcopenia has been associated with low scores on various instruments used to assess the QoL; however, litt...

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Published in:Ear, nose, & throat journal nose, & throat journal, 2022-02, p.1455613221076791-1455613221076791
Main Authors: Martínez-Herrera, Brenda-Eugenia, Trujillo-Hernández, Benjamín, Sat-Muñoz, Daniel, González-Barba, Faviola, Cruz-Corona, Eduardo, Bayardo-López, Luis Héctor, Solórzano-Meléndez, Alejandro, Oñate-Zubdia, David-Abdiel, Morán-Galavíz, Ruben-Eduardo, Flores-Carlos, Juan-Daniel, Dávalos-Cobián, Carlos, Salazar-Páramo, Mario, Nava-Zavala, Arnulfo-Hernán, Gómez-Sánchez, Eduardo, Balderas-Peña, Luz-Ma-Adriana
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Health-related quality of life (QoL) is a measure that allows us to know the patient's perception of well-being and how it is affected by their disease and treatments. In cancer patients, sarcopenia has been associated with low scores on various instruments used to assess the QoL; however, little information is available on the effects of sarcopenia and sarcopenic obesity on the QoL of patients with head and neck cancer (H&NC). In this cross-sectional study with 71 H&NC patients aged between 40 and 80 years, we describe the scores on the instruments EORTC QLQ C-30 and EORTC QLQ-H&N35 according to the sarcopenia phenotype (NSG, nonsarcopenic group; SG, sarcopenic group; and SOG, sarcopenic obesity group), hand-grip strength, gait speed, total lymphocyte count, albumin, cholesterol and C-reactive protein, and the relationships between these variables. The prevalence of sarcopenia and sarcopenic obesity was 48% and 28%, respectively. The QoL analysis showed that NSG had higher scores on the physical functioning scale [NSG 93 (83-100); SG 73 (52-88); SOG 83 (53-93), P = .009] and lower scores on the fatigue scale [NSG 11 (0-22); S 39 (30-67); SOG 44 (14-56); P = .004]. The NSG had a higher hand-grip strength (31.1 kg) than SG (24.1 kg, P = .007) and SOG (26.3 kg, P = .001), and a lower C-reactive protein. The SG and SOG showed no differences between them. Patients with sarcopenia or sarcopenic obesity have lower physical performance and a higher level of fatigue than nonsarcopenic patients. This loss of function can maintain or worsen sarcopenia due to the patient's self-restraint in physical exertion that encourages an increase in muscle tissue.
ISSN:0145-5613
1942-7522
DOI:10.1177/01455613221076791