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Eating behaviors and dietary quality in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia survivors
Author(s) -
Chardon Marie L.,
Pinto Stefania,
Slayton William B.,
Fisher Rachel S.,
Janicke David M.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
pediatric blood and cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.116
H-Index - 105
eISSN - 1545-5017
pISSN - 1545-5009
DOI - 10.1002/pbc.28811
Subject(s) - medicine , survivorship curve , psychological intervention , environmental health , food group , gerontology , demography , pediatrics , psychiatry , population , sociology
Background Childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) survivors’ increased risk for adverse health outcomes could be mitigated through consuming a balanced diet. Nonetheless, >70% of adult survivors do not meet survivorship dietary recommendations. ALL treatment may amplify risk for restricted dietary preferences (picky eating) and poor self‐regulation of food intake that could contribute to suboptimal diets in survivorship. This study aims to: (a) characterize differences in picky eating and self‐regulation of food intake between survivors and peer controls; and (b) examine the associations between these eating behaviors and dietary quality in ALL survivors relative to peer controls. Methods Participants were children (5‐13 years) with (n = 32) and without (n = 32) a history of ALL and their caregivers. Children's dietary quality (Healthy Eating Index‐2015) was calculated from 24‐h dietary recalls. Caregivers completed the Child Eating Behavior Questionnaire‐Food Fussiness subscale and the Child Self‐Regulation in Eating Questionnaire. Results Independent samples t ‐tests revealed survivors exhibited greater picky eating than peer controls but comparable self‐regulation of food intake. Bootstrapped grouped multivariate regression results showed that for ALL survivors, greater picky eating was associated with worse dietary quality (controlling for age and self‐regulation of food intake). For peer controls, worse self‐regulation of food intake was associated with poorer dietary quality (controlling for picky eating and age). Conclusions Results provide preliminary support that different eating behaviors contribute to poor dietary quality in children with and without an ALL history. These findings suggest that interventions to improve ALL survivors’ dietary quality may benefit targeting picky eating.

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