Maintaining good nutritional status during treatment for children with cancer is crucial for many outcomes, such as overall survival rate, tolerance to treatment, susceptibility to infection, and quality of life. Neurotumors in children account for the highest proportion among solid tumors in children. Previous studies have clearly shown that neurotumors in children have different nutritional characteristics from hematological tumors and other solid tumors in children. Our retrospective data found that there was a significant correlation between the BMI Z values of children with neurotumors before and during radiotherapy and the frequency of adverse events. The occurrence of adverse events has a negative impact on the quality of life of child patients. Therefore, we plan to conduct a prospective, observational, multi-center longitudinal cohort study to evaluate the dynamic changes in nutritional status during the peri-radiotherapy period, explore the correlation between nutritional status and quality of life in children with neurotumors before and after radiotherapy, and establish a nutritional management plan and nutritional risk early warning model suitable for Chinese children with neurotumors.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
93
life quality
The PedsQL Brain Tumor Module and the PedsQL4.0 Generic Core Scale for Children were used to assess the quality of life of the subjects. The assessment data were collected, including the children's self-assessment module and the parent proxy assessment module, covering dimensions such as physical function, emotional function, social function, and school function.
Time frame: Before radiotherapy, at the end of radiotherapy, one month after radiotherapy, three months after radiotherapy, six months after radiotherapy
nutritional status
Time frame: Before radiotherapy, at the end of radiotherapy, one month after radiotherapy, three months after radiotherapy, and six months after radiotherapy
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