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Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer 2/2013

01-02-2013 | Original Article

Taste alteration in breast cancer patients treated with taxane chemotherapy: experience, effect, and coping strategies

Authors: Rebecca M. Speck, Angela DeMichele, John T. Farrar, Sean Hennessy, Jun J. Mao, Margaret G. Stineman, Frances K. Barg

Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer | Issue 2/2013

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Abstract

Purpose

This study examined the experience and coping strategies for taste alteration in female breast cancer patients treated with docetaxel or paclitaxel.

Methods

A purposive sample of 25 patients currently receiving docetaxel or paclitaxel or within 6 months of having completed treatment was recruited. Semi-structured interviews and patient-level data were utilized for this exploratory descriptive study. Interview data were analyzed with the constant comparative method; patient-level data were abstracted from the electronic medical record.

Results

Of all side effects reported from taxanes, the most common was taste alteration (8 of 10 docetaxel patients, 3 of 15 paclitaxel patients). Women that experience taste alteration chose not to eat as much, ate on an irregular schedule, and/or lost interest in preparing meals for themselves and/or their family. Women adopted a variety of new behaviors to deal with the taste alteration and its effects, including trying new recipes, eating strongly flavored foods, honoring specific food cravings, eating candy before meals, cutting food with lemon, drinking sweetened drinks, using plastic eating utensils, drinking from a straw, brushing their teeth and tongue before meals, and using baking soda and salt wash or antibacterial mouthwash.

Conclusions

Taste alteration affects breast cancer patients’ lives, and they develop management strategies to deal with the effect. While some self-management strategies can be seen as positively adaptive, the potential for increased caloric consumption and poor eating behaviors associated with some coping strategies may be a cause for concern given the observation of weight gain during breast cancer treatment and association of obesity with poor treatment outcomes in breast cancer patients. Further studies are warranted to determine the overall burden of this symptom and measurement of cancer and non-cancer-related consequences of these behavioral adaptations.
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Metadata
Title
Taste alteration in breast cancer patients treated with taxane chemotherapy: experience, effect, and coping strategies
Authors
Rebecca M. Speck
Angela DeMichele
John T. Farrar
Sean Hennessy
Jun J. Mao
Margaret G. Stineman
Frances K. Barg
Publication date
01-02-2013
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Supportive Care in Cancer / Issue 2/2013
Print ISSN: 0941-4355
Electronic ISSN: 1433-7339
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-012-1551-3

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