Practical cancer nutrition, from guidelines to clinical practice : a digital solution to patient-centred care

Article indépendant

HUSTAD, K. S. | KOTENG, L. H. | URRIZOLA, A. | ARENDS, J. | BYE, A. | DAJANI, O. | DELIENS, Luc | FALLON, M. | HJERMSTAD, M. J. | KOHLEN, M. | KURITA, G. P. | LUNDEBY, T. | MITREA, N. | PAYNE, C. | ROSELLO-KERANEN, S. | WARMBRODT, N. | DE WILDE, A. | KAASA, S. | DE VOS-GEELEN, J. | LAIRD, B. J. A. | MYPATH CONSORTIUM

BACKGROUND: Malnutrition affects 20%-70% of cancer patients, depending on tumour type, disease stage, and clinical setting. While nutritional care is essential for improving patients' quality of life and clinical outcomes, it is not systematically integrated into routine cancer care. MyPath is a European Union project aiming to implement patient-centred care (PCC) at nine European cancer centres using implementation science. Multidisciplinary teams have developed standardised digitally supported PCC pathways based on patient-reported outcomes (PROs) with linked evidence-based management options. Through systematic assessment and management of common symptoms and psychosocial problems in cancer patients, MyPath aims to facilitate changes in clinical practice to improve PCC for all. As part of this, the MyPath Nutrition Care Pathway (NCP) aims to facilitate necessary clinical changes to routinely assess and address nutrition in all patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between September 2022 and August 2024, an international multidisciplinary team reviewed evidence-based nutrition guidelines to select relevant PROs and other variables necessary to systematically assess patients, allowing for tailored nutritional care. RESULTS: The MyPath NCP assessment relies on nutritional status (Malnutrition Screening Tool for malnutrition risk, modified Global Leadership Initiative on Malnutrition criteria for malnutrition, and body mass index/weight change for obesity/unintentional weight gain), health status (functional status, cancer diagnosis and prognosis, and prehabilitation needs), and inflammatory status (C-reactive protein levels). Based on this assessment, the digital solution suggests tailored, evidence-based nutritional interventions. Continuous monitoring through PROs and clinical consultations will customise care to patients' dynamic nutritional needs. The first version of this digital solution will be piloted in 2025. CONCLUSIONS: Inconsistent implementation of nutrition guidelines is a key challenge in cancer care. The MyPath NCP offers an accessible, patient-centred assessment and management system that integrates nutritional care into routine cancer care, providing a versatile solution that can be implemented across diverse health care settings.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.esmoop.2025.104529

Voir la revue «ESMO open, 10»

Autres numéros de la revue «ESMO open»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

ESMO designated centres of integrated oncolog...

Article indépendant | KREYE, G. | ESMO open | n°6 | vol.7

BACKGROUND: The European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) Designated Centres (DCs) of Integrated Oncology and Palliative Care is an incentive programme established in 2003 aiming to improve the integration of oncology and palli...

ESMO designated centres of integrated oncolog...

Article indépendant | KREYE, G. | ESMO open | n°6 | vol.7

BACKGROUND: The European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) Designated Centres (DCs) of Integrated Oncology and Palliative Care is an incentive programme established in 2003 aiming to improve the integration of oncology and palli...

Population-based study of dying in hospital i...

Article indépendant | COHEN, J. | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°6 | vol.22

This study examined the proportion of deaths taking place in hospitals in six European countries in relation to demographic, epidemiologic and healthcare factors. Retrospective analyses were performed on a database integrating dea...

De la même série

Globalization of clinical trials in oncology ...

Article indépendant | IZARN, F. | ESMO open | n°1 | vol.10

BACKGROUND: Over the past two decades, the globalization of oncology clinical trials has expanded, yet significant disparities persist across countries. This study aimed to evaluate these geographical inequalities, the evolution o...

A taxonomy of the factors contributing to the...

Article indépendant | CHERNY, N. I. | ESMO open | n°1 | vol.10

Many patients with cancer approaching the end of life (EOL) continue to receive treatments that are unlikely to provide meaningful clinical benefit, potentially causing more harm than good. This is called overtreatment at the EOL....

Health networking on cancer in the European U...

Article indépendant | CASALI, P. G. | ESMO open | n°2 | vol.10

Health networking is in principle a formidable instrument to address many challenges posed by cancer, one of the two most common and most lethal non-communicable chronic diseases. The European Union (EU)'s Beating Cancer Plan fore...

Quality-of-care indicators for oncology manag...

Article indépendant | KANESVARAN, R. | ESMO open | n°3 | vol.10

Cancer is a major cause of morbidity and mortality, with variable outcomes seen in the Asia-Pacific region due to substantial differences in cancer care and management. Quality indicators are evidence-based, standardized measures ...

Practical cancer nutrition, from guidelines t...

Article indépendant | HUSTAD, K. S. | ESMO open | n°4 | vol.10

BACKGROUND: Malnutrition affects 20%-70% of cancer patients, depending on tumour type, disease stage, and clinical setting. While nutritional care is essential for improving patients' quality of life and clinical outcomes, it is n...

Chargement des enrichissements...