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Impact of Preoperative Sarcopenia on Morbidity and Mortality in Patients Operated on From Digestive Cancers

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CHU de Reims · 2016

Abstract

Sarcopenia (loss of muscle mass and function) can be observed at any age and results of multiple factors (age, activity, inflammatory factors, nutritional status...). It deeply impacts the physical performance and the basal metabolism, and induces cardiovascular disorders, dyslipidemia, and diabetes. Sarcopenia appears like an independent factor decreasing the quality of life, exacerbating the toxicity of chemotherapy and increasing mortality for gastrointestinal cancer. However, few studies have demonstrated his impact on postoperative course in digestive oncology. The search for sarcopenia, complementary nutritional status, is now a source of great interest with 62 ongoing projects in the United States. The first objective of this study is to evaluate the impact of preoperative sarcopenia on 30-days morbidity and mortality of patients operated on from poor prognosis gastrointestinal cancer (liver and pancreas). The second objective is to evaluate the impact of preoperative sarcopenia on the long term outcomes (12 months) on the same patients.

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ClinicalTrials.gov
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2026-07-02 MST

Cite this

APA
Anonymous. (2016). Impact of Preoperative Sarcopenia on Morbidity and Mortality in Patients Operated on From Digestive Cancers. <em>CHU de Reims</em>. https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT02811666
Vancouver
Anonymous. Impact of Preoperative Sarcopenia on Morbidity and Mortality in Patients Operated on From Digestive Cancers. CHU de Reims. 2016.
BibTeX
@misc{anon2016Impact, title = {Impact of Preoperative Sarcopenia on Morbidity and Mortality in Patients Operated on From Digestive Cancers}, author = {Anonymous}, journal = {CHU de Reims}, year = {2016}, }

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