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Featured researches published by Louise Daly.


Proceedings of the Nutrition Society | 2016

Cancer-associated malnutrition, cachexia and sarcopenia: the skeleton in the hospital closet 40 years later.

Aoife M. Ryan; Derek G. Power; Louise Daly; Samantha Cushen; Ní Bhuachalla Ē; Carla M. Prado

An awareness of the importance of nutritional status in hospital settings began more than 40 years ago. Much has been learned since and has altered care. For the past 40 years several large studies have shown that cancer patients are amongst the most malnourished of all patient groups. Recently, the use of gold-standard methods of body composition assessment, including computed tomography, has facilitated the understanding of the true prevalence of cancer cachexia (CC). CC remains a devastating syndrome affecting 50-80 % of cancer patients and it is responsible for the death of at least 20 %. The aetiology is multifactorial and complex; driven by pro-inflammatory cytokines and specific tumour-derived factors, which initiate an energy-intensive acute phase protein response and drive the loss of skeletal muscle even in the presence of adequate food intake and insulin. The most clinically relevant phenotypic feature of CC is muscle loss (sarcopenia), as this relates to asthenia, fatigue, impaired physical function, reduced tolerance to treatments, impaired quality of life and reduced survival. Sarcopenia is present in 20-70 % depending on the tumour type. There is mounting evidence that sarcopenia increases the risk of toxicity to many chemotherapy drugs. However, identification of patients with muscle loss has become increasingly difficult as 40-60 % of cancer patients are overweight or obese, even in the setting of metastatic disease. Further challenges exist in trying to reverse CC and sarcopenia. Future clinical trials investigating dose reductions in sarcopenic patients and dose-escalating studies based on pre-treatment body composition assessment have the potential to alter cancer treatment paradigms.


British Journal of Cancer | 2017

The impact of body composition parameters on ipilimumab toxicity and survival in patients with metastatic melanoma.

Louise Daly; Derek G. Power; Aine O'Reilly; Paul P. Donnellan; Samantha Cushen; Kathleen O'Sullivan; Maria Twomey; David P Woodlock; H. P. Redmond; Aoife M. Ryan

Background:Body composition is an important predictor of drug toxicity and outcome. Ipilimumab (Ipi), a monoclonal antibody used to treat metastatic melanoma, has specific toxicities. No validated biomarkers that predict Ipi toxicity and efficacy exist. Also, the impact of Ipi on body composition has not been established.Methods:Patients with metastatic melanoma treated with Ipi between 2009 and 2015 were included. Body composition was assessed by computed tomography at baseline and after four cycles of Ipi. Sarcopenia and low muscle attenuation (MA) were defined using published cut-points. All adverse events (AEs) and immune-related AEs (irAEs) were recorded (Common Terminology Criteria For Adverse Event V.4.0).Results:Eighty-four patients were included in this study (62% male, median age 54 years). At baseline, 24% were sarcopenic and 33% had low MA. On multivariate analysis, sarcopenia and low MA were significantly associated with high-grade AEs (OR=5.34, 95% CI: 1.15–24.88, P=0.033; OR=5.23, 95% CI: 1.41–19.30, P=0.013, respectively), and low MA was associated with high-grade irAEs (OR=3.57, 95% CI: 1.09–11.77, P=0.036). Longitudinal analysis (n=59) revealed significant reductions in skeletal muscle area (SMA), total body fat-free mass, fat mass (all P<0.001) and MA (P=0.030). Mean reduction in SMA was 3.3%/100 days (95% CI: −4.48 to −1.79%, P<0.001). A loss of SMA ⩾7.5%/100 days (highest quartile) was a significant predictor of overall survival in multivariable Cox regression analysis (HR: 2.1, 95% CI: 1.02–4.56, P=0.046).Conclusions:Patients with sarcopenia and low MA are more likely to experience severe treatment-related toxicity to Ipi. Loss of muscle during treatment was predictive of worse survival. Treatments to increase muscle mass and influence outcome warrant further investigation.


Journal of Cachexia, Sarcopenia and Muscle | 2018

Loss of skeletal muscle during systemic chemotherapy is prognostic of poor survival in patients with foregut cancer: Muscle loss during chemotherapy is prognostic of poor survival

Louise Daly; Eadaoin Ni Bhuachalla; Derek G. Power; Samantha Cushen; Karl James; Aoife M. Ryan

Malnutrition, weight loss, and muscle wasting are common in patients with foregut cancers (oesophagus, stomach, pancreas, liver, and bile ducts) and are associated with adverse clinical outcomes. However, little is known about the changes in body composition that occur in these patients during chemotherapy and its impacts clinical outcomes.


Journal of Cachexia, Sarcopenia and Muscle | 2018

Computed tomography diagnosed cachexia and sarcopenia in 725 oncology patients: is nutritional screening capturing hidden malnutrition?

Eadaoin Ni Bhuachalla; Louise Daly; Derek G. Power; Samantha Cushen; Peter MacEneaney; Aoife M. Ryan

Nutrition screening on admission to hospital is mandated in many countries, but to date, there is no consensus on which tool is optimal in the oncology setting. Wasting conditions such as cancer cachexia (CC) and sarcopenia are common in cancer patients and negatively impact on outcomes; however, they are often masked by excessive adiposity. This study aimed to inform the application of screening in cancer populations by investigating whether commonly used nutritional screening tools are adequately capturing nutritionally vulnerable patients, including those with abnormal body composition phenotypes (CC, sarcopenia, and myosteatosis).


Proceedings of the Nutrition Society | 2015

Body composition as a predictor of chemotherapy toxicity in patients with metastatic prostate cancer treated with docetaxel

Samantha Cushen; D. G. Power; R. McDermot; K. O'Sullivan; P. Maceneaney; Louise Daly; Aoife M. Ryan

S. J. Cushen, D. G. Power, R. McDermot, K. O’Sullivan, P. Maceneaney, L. Daly and A. M. Ryan Dept Food & Nutritional Sciences, University College Cork, Republic of Ireland, Dept Medical Oncology, Mercy & Cork University Hospitals, Cork, Republic of Ireland, Dept Statistics, University College Cork, Republic of Ireland, Dept Medical Oncology, St. Vincents University Hospital, Dublin, Republic of Ireland and Dept Radiology, Mercy University Hospital, Cork, Republic of Ireland


Clinical nutrition ESPEN | 2016

Impact of body composition parameters on clinical outcomes in patients with metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer treated with docetaxel

Samantha Cushen; Derek G. Power; Kevin P. Murphy; Ray McDermott; Brendan T. Griffin; Marvin Lim; Louise Daly; Peter MacEneaney; Kathleen O’Sullivan; Carla M. Prado; Aoife M. Ryan


Annals of Oncology | 2017

Reply to ‘Higher rate of severe toxicities in obese patients receiving dose-dense (dd) chemotherapy according to unadjusted body surface area: results of the prospectively randomized GAIN study’ by J. Furlanetto et al.

Louise Daly; Derek G. Power; Aoife M. Ryan


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016

Cancer-associated malnutrition: Prevalence of cachexia, sarcopenia and impact on health-related quality of life and survival in a cohort of Irish ambulatory patients receiving chemotherapy.

Eadaoin Ni Bhuachalla; Louise Daly; Samantha Cushen; Deirdre O'Mahony; Richard Martin Bambury; Seamus O'Reilly; Peter Mceneaney; Maria Twomey; Aoife M. Ryan; Derek G. Power


Annals of Oncology | 2016

Malnutrition in 822 Irish cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy: prevalence and impact on quality of life and survival

Louise Daly; É. Ní Bhuachalla; Samantha Cushen; Derek G. Power; Seamus O'Reilly; Peter Mceneaney; Deirdre O'Mahony; Richard Martin Bambury; Aoife M. Ryan


Proceedings of the Nutrition Society | 2015

A prospective investigation into the nutritional status of Irish oncology outpatients: prevalence of malnutrition, cachexia, sarcopenia and impact on quality of life

Samantha Cushen; D. G. Power; P. McEneaney; Louise Daly; Aoife M. Ryan

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Derek G. Power

Cork University Hospital

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F. Dwyer

University College Cork

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