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Title

Importance of Pancreatic Enzyme Replacement Therapy after Surgery of Cancer of the Esophagus or the Esophagogastric Junction.

Authors

Kiefer, Thomas; Krahl, Dorothea; Osthoff, Kathrin; Thuss-Patience, Peter; Bunse, Jörg; Adam, Ulrich; Jansen, Marc H.; Ott, Rudolf; Pfitzmann, Robert; Pross, Matthias; Kohlmann, Thomas; Daeschlein, Georg; Buhlert, Hermann; Völler, Heinz; Hirt, Carsten

Abstract

After surgical treatment of cancer of the esophagus or the esophagogastric junction we observed steatorrhea, which is so far seldom reported. We analyzed all patients treated in our rehabilitation clinic between 2011 and 2014 and focused on the impact of surgery on digestion of fat. Reported steatorrhea was anamnestic, no pancreatic function test was made. Here we show the results from 51 patients. Twenty-three (45%) of the patients reported steatorrhea. Assuming decreased pancreatic function pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy (PERT) was started or modified during the rehabilitation stay (in the following called STEA+). These patients were compared with the patients without steatorrhea and without PERT (STEA−). Maximum weight loss between surgery and rehabilitation start was 18 kg in STEA+ patient and 15.3 kg in STEA− patients. STEA+ patients gained more weight under PERT during the rehabilitation phase (3 wk) than STEA− patients without PERT (+1.0 kg vs. −0.3 kg, P = 0.032). We report for the first time, that patients after cancer related esophageal surgery show anamnestic signs of exocrine pancreas insufficiency and need PERT to gain body weight.

Subjects

THERAPEUTIC use of enzymes; CELIAC disease; DIGESTION; ESOPHAGEAL tumors; FAT; WEIGHT loss; WEIGHT gain; SAMPLE size (Statistics); DATA analysis software; EXOCRINE pancreatic insufficiency; DESCRIPTIVE statistics

Publication

Nutrition & Cancer, 2018, Vol 70, Issue 1, p69

ISSN

0163-5581

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1080/01635581.2017.1374419

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