| Literature DB >> 31193891 |
Abstract
The growing interest in the alterations of tumor cell metabolism and their possible therapeutic exploitation also spurred new complementary and integrative approaches such as treating patients with a ketogenic diet (KD). KDs aim at inhibiting glycolytic tumor metabolism and growth, and have therefore been proposed as adjuncts not only to standard-of-care, but also to other therapies targeting tumor metabolism. Here I describe the life and forgotten work of one of the earliest researchers who realized the importance of altered tumor cell metabolism and its possible exploitation through metabolic modifications: Wilhelm Brünings. Brünings was a German natural scientist and physician famous for his innovative contributions to the fields of physiology and otorhinolaryngology. Based on the findings of Otto Warburg and his physiological reasoning he started to experiment with insulin administration and KDs in his patients with head and neck cancers, aiming to maximally lower blood glucose concentrations. He obtained encouraging short-term results, although most tumors became refractory to treatment after several weeks. His pioneering work is worth revisiting, especially for an international readership that may be unaware of his efforts, as hypoglycemic treatments, including the use of insulin injections and KDs, are currently being re-investigated as complementary and integrative cancer treatments.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Hypoglycemia; Insulin; Ketogenic diet; Low carbohydrate diet
Year: 2018 PMID: 31193891 PMCID: PMC6544614 DOI: 10.1016/j.jtcme.2018.06.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Tradit Complement Med ISSN: 2225-4110
Fig. 1Wilhelm Brünings as shown in a laudatory article by A. Greifenstein on the occasion of his 60th birthday celebration which was published in the journal Archiv für Ohren-, Nasen-und Kehlkopfheilkunde (now the European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology).
Fig. 2An excerpt from Brünings’ first report.
Human studies on the ketogenic diet and cancer published since Brünings' initial experiments. The list should contain all articles listed in PubMed upon a search using the keyword “ketogenic”. Only studies published as peer-reviewed journal articles have been listed, while those mentioned solely in abstracts, comments or posters have been left out. In case of more than two study participants, their ages are given either as median (range) or mean ± standard deviation. CT: Chemotherapy; MCT: Medium chain triglycerides; N: Number of subjects on a KD; RCT: Radio-chemotherapy; RT: Radiotherapy.
| Study author(s) | Year | Study type | N | Age [years] | Tumor | Concurrent treatment | KD/study duration | Concurrent calorie restriction prescribed | Supplements/artificial foods prescribed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brünings | 1941 | Intra-cohort study | 14 | 56 (42–68) | Head and neck cancer | Insulin | ≈12 weeks | No | No |
| Brünings | 1942 | Intra-cohort study | 30 | 55 (38–70) | Various extra-cranial tumors | Insulin | 1.6 (0.3–3.0) weeks | No | No |
| Fearon et al. | 1988 | Case study | 5 | 59 (52–73) | Stage IV extra-cranial tumors | None | 6 days control diet, then 7 days KD | No | Yes (MCT, arginine D-3-hydroxybutyrate, whey protein) |
| Nebeling et al. | 1995 | Case study | 2 | 3 and 8.5 | Grade III anaplastic/cerebellar astrozytoma | None/CT | 8 weeks | No | Yes (MCT, artificial flavorings, protein powder, multivitamins, vitamin D, multiminerals) |
| Chu-Shore et al. | 2010 | Case study | 5 | 8 (2–47) | Renal angiomyolipomas/subependymal giant cell tumors | None | 50 (3–66) months | No | Probably yes (hospital-prescribed KD with specified ratios) |
| Zuccoli et al. | 2010 | Case study | 1 | 65 | Glioblastoma | RCT | 2 months | Yes | Yes (4:1 KetoCal®, MCT, multivitamins, multiminerals) |
| Schmidt et al. | 2011 | Intra-cohort study | 16 | 50 (30–65) | Stage IV extra-cranial tumors | None | 12 weeks | No | Yes (yoghurt drinks including MCT, vegetable oils and milk protein) |
| Fine et al. | 2012 | Intra-cohort study (registered) | 10 | 62 (52–73) | Stage IV extra-cranial tumors | None | 4 weeks | No | No |
| Schroeder et al. | 2013 | Intra-cohort study | 11 | 67 | Stage II-IV head and neck cancer | None | 4 days | No | No |
| Champ et al. | 2014 | Case study | 6 | 59 (34–62) | Glioblastoma | RCT | 32 (13–52) weeks | No (5), yes (1) | No |
| Rieger et al. | 2014 | Intra-cohort study (registered) | 20 | 57 (30–72) | Glioblastoma | None | 5 weeks | No | Yes (commercial yoghurt drinks and plant oils) |
| Branca et al. | 2015 | Case study | 1 | 66 | Grade 3 breast cancer | Vitamin D3 (10000 IU every other day) | 3 weeks | No | Yes (commercial preparation of oleic acid associated with glycosylated vitamin D-binding |
| Schwartz et al. | 2015 | Case study (registered) | 2 | 55 and 52 | Glioblastoma | None | 4 and 12 weeks | Yes | Yes (KetoCal®) |
| Strowd et al. | 2015 | Case study | 8 | 41 ± 10 | Low and high grade glioma | None/CT | 2-24 (mean 13.2) months | No | Yes (multivitamins, vitamin D, calcium) |
| Jansen & Walach | 2016 | Case study | 13 | 68 | Various curative (6)/palliative (6)/end stage (1) tumors | Mixed | ≈1 year | No | Yes (commercial artificial foods) |
| Klement & Sweeney | 2016 | Case study | 6 | 54 (40–74) | Stage I-IV extra-cranial | RCT (5), CT (1) | 6.6 (4.6–10.4) weeks | No | Yes (commercial crystalline amino acid formula) |
| Schwalb et al. | 2016 | Case study | 6 | 64 (55–73) | Stage IV extra-cranial | Complementary immunotherapeutic treatment | 4.5 (1–34) weeks | No | Yes (commercial crystalline amino acid formula, fermented milk and colostrum product, emulsion with chondroitin sulfate, vitamin D3 and oleic acid, vitamin D3, curcumin, omega-3 fatty acids, ubiquinol, arginine, multivitamins) |
| Tan-Shalaby et al. | 2016 | Intra-cohort study (registered) | 17 | 65 (42–87) | Stage IV various tumors | None | 16 weeks (with extension up to 131 weeks in 3 patients) | No | No |
| Tóth & Clemens | 2016 | Case study | 1 | 60 | Grade 2 myoepithelial soft palate tumor | None | 20 months | No | No |
| Artzi et al. | 2017 | Controlled case study (registered) | 5 | 42 (37–69) | Low and high grade glioma | None (1), bevacizumab (4) | 8 (2–31) months | No | Yes (4:1 KetoCal®) |
| İyikesici et al. | 2017 | Case study | 1 | 29 | Stage IV triple-negative breast cancer | Metabolically (insulin-) supported CT, hyperbaric oxygen, hyperthermia | 1 year | No | No |
| Santos et al. | 2017 | Case study | 1 | 54 | Recurrent glioblastoma | Intranasal perillyl | 3 months | No | No |
| Tóth & Clemens | 2017 | Case study | 1 | 62 | Rectal cancer | RT (6 weeks), then none | 24 months | No | No |
| Zahra et al. | 2017 | Intra-cohort study | 9 | 67 (51–83) | Stage III/IV NSCLC (7) and pancreatic cancer (2) | RCT | 1.1 (0–6) weeks | No | Yes (4:1 KetoCal®, artificial flavorings) |
| Elsakka et al. | 2018 | Case study | 1 | 38 | Glioblastoma | RCT, hyperbaric oxygen, metformin | 24 months | Yes (9 months), then no | Yes (multivitamins, vitamin D, multiminerals, phytochemicals, MCT) |
| Martin-McGill et al. | 2018 | Intra-cohort study (registered) | 6 | 46 (34–66) | High grade glioma | Lomustine (1), RCT (3), CT (2) | 3 months | No | No |
| Santos et al. | 2018 | Controlled cohort study (registered) | 9 | 53 (31–61) | Recurrent glioblastoma | Intranasal perillyl | 3 months | No | No |
| Tóth et al. | 2018 | Case study | 1 | 45 | High-grade cervical | None | 26 months | No | No |
Fig. 3Timeline of studies using ketogenic diets to treat cancer patients. The early studies are labeled with author names and the year of publication.