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Multicenter Study
Nutritional support practices in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation centers: A nationwide comparison.
- Annic Baumgartner, Mario Bargetzi, Annika Bargetzi, Noemi Zueger, Micheal Medinger, Jakob Passweg, Urs Schanz, Panagiotis Samaras, Yves Chalandon, Claude Pichard, Alessandro Limonta, Luciano Wannesson, Thomas Pabst, Michel A Duchosal, Urs Hess, Zeno Stanga, Beat Mueller, and Philipp Schuetz.
- Medical University Department, Clinic for Endocrinology/Metabolism/Clinical Nutrition, Kantonsspital Aarau, Aarau and Medical Faculty of the University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
- Nutrition. 2017 Mar 1; 35: 43-50.
ObjectiveIn 2009, international nutritional societies published practice guidelines on screening and nutritional support for patients undergoing stem cell transplantation. Little is known about how these guidelines are implemented in clinical practice. We performed a nationwide survey with the aim of understanding current practice patterns, differences between clinical practice, and international recommendations as well as barriers to the use of nutritional therapy.MethodsWe performed a qualitative survey including all centers across Switzerland offering allogeneic (n = 3) or autologous (n = 7) stem cell transplantation. We focused on in-house protocols pertaining to malnutrition screening, indications for nutritional support, types of nutritional therapy available and provided, and recommendations regarding neutropenic diets.ResultsAll centers offering allogeneic, and most of the centers offering autologous transplantation, had a malnutrition screening tool, mainly the nutritional risk score (NRS 2002) method. Only one center does not provide nutritional support. There is wide variation regarding start and stop of nutritional therapy as well as route of delivery, with five centers recommending parenteral nutrition and five centers recommending enteral nutrition as a first step. Although all centers offering allogeneic transplantation, and approximately every other autologous transplant center, used a neutropenic diet, specific recommendations regarding the type of food and food handling showed significant variation.ConclusionThis Swiss survey found wide variation in the use of nutritional therapy in patients undergoing stem cell transplantation, with low adherence overall to current practice guidelines. Understanding and reducing barriers to guideline implementation in clinical practice may improve clinical outcomes. Close collaboration of centers will facilitate future research needed to improve current practice and ensure high quality of treatment.Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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