Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2734769 Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 2011 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

ContextTaste and smell (chemosensory) alterations are common and distressing among advanced cancer patients, but their specific nature is poorly described and seldom linked to dietary intake. Details of altered chemosensory perception may help to explain food intake behaviors.ObjectivesOur goal was to characterize chemosensory alterations and their relationship with dietary intake and quality of life (QOL).MethodsAdult advanced cancer patients (n = 192) completed a chemosensory self-assessment questionnaire to characterize changes in their sense of smell and four basic tastes (sweet, sour, salty, and bitter) since the onset of cancer, three-day food record, and QOL questionnaire.ResultsPatients experienced either no alteration in any basic tastes and sense of smell sensations (26% of patients) or one of three altered chemosensory phenotypes: 1) stronger sensations overall (42%), 2) weaker sensations overall (18%), or 3) mixed (some sensations stronger and others weaker, 14%). For individual sensations (sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and smell), stronger sensation was twice more prevalent than weaker sensation (P = 0.035). Patients reporting chemosensory alteration consumed 20%–25% fewer calories per day (P = 0.0018), experienced greater weight loss (P = 0.0036), and had poorer QOL scores (P = 0.0176) compared with patients with no alterations, but results did not vary by chemosensory phenotype. Chemosensory alterations were not related to tumor type (P = 0.884), gender (P = 0.286), or nausea (P = 0.278).ConclusionChemosensory alterations predict dietary intake and QOL; the identification of chemosensory phenotypes provides a rationale to adjust the properties of foods and dietary recommendations in function of the specific nature of these changes.

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