RESUMEN
Aggressive oncological chemotherapy often impairs the nutritional status of tumor patients. To evaluate the pathogenetic mechanisms, food intake in 13 cancer patients was investigated in correlation with nitrogen losses, N balances, muscle wasting, and weight course, during cytostatic therapy. Median daily N and energy intakes were reduced only in patients with weight loss [0.55 g protein, 16.5 kcal/kg ideal body wt (IBW)]. Patients with constant weight had the same intake as control subjects (1.27 g protein, 37.2 kcal IBW). N balances and creatinine height index (CHI) correlated with daily nutrient intake. Fecal N excretions did not correlate with urinary losses; there was no excess of fecal N loss because of cytostatic treatment. The impairment of cancer patients' nutritional status seems to depend primarily on the decrease of spontaneous oral intake as a consequence of the side effects of tumor therapy. Changes in CHI, compared before and after chemotherapy, indicated muscle wasting of weight-losing patients.