| Literature DB >> 31416430 |
Ellie Shingler1, Rachel Perry2, Alexandra Mitchell2, Clare England2, Claire Perks2, Georgia Herbert2, Andy Ness2, Charlotte Atkinson2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diets that restrict energy or macronutrient intake (e.g. fasting/ketogenic diets (KDs)) may selectively protect non-tumour cells during cancer treatment. Previous reviews have focused on a subset of dietary restrictions (DR) or have not performed systematic searches. We conducted a systematic scoping review of DR at the time of cancer treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31416430 PMCID: PMC6694513 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-019-5931-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Inclusion flowchart
Ketogenic diet results table
| Reference (author, year, country) | Design | Population (No. of participants, age, site/lesion type) | Intervention (DR intervention, corresponding cancer treatment) | Feasibility | Tolerance | Treatment effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cohen, 2016, USA [ | Feasibility RCT | 73 randomised, 45 analysed (25 in IG, 20 in CG) Mean age 60.2y (range 31-79y) Recurrent ovarian cancer | KD: 5% CHO, 25% protein, 70% fat over 12 wks. Usual care (24% received concurrent chemotherapy) | 62% retention 80% adherence (defined as ∼0.5 mmol/L urinary ketone conc.) | ↔ lean body mass between groups ↓total body fat (kg) (32.7 ± 3.1 vs 41.2 ± 4.4) android fat (kg) (2.8 ± 0.4 vs 3.6 ± 0.5), and visceral fat (g) (975 ± 150.9 vs 1024 ± 175.6) ( | ↓insulin (μU/mL) in IG (6.7 ± 0.9 vs 12.1 ± 1.5, ↔ glucose ↓C-peptide in IG (2.0 ± 0.3 vs 3.0 ± 0.3, ↔ IGF-I or IGFBP-1 ↑ physical component scores in IG (45 vs 40 ↔ mental component score ↑cravings for salt ( ↓cravings for starchy foods ( ↔ cravings for high-fat foods or sweets |
| Anderson 2016, USA [ | Phase 1 trial with single assignment | 9 Age NR Stage 3-4b head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | 4:1* KD fed by PEG followed by oral intake for 5 wks. Concurrent platinum chemo-radiotherapy | 33% retention Ppts who discontinued completed a median of 6 days (range 0–8 days) on KD Trial terminated early (intended sample size 14) | 6 discontinued: additional stress ( 2 SAEs: hyperuricemia, pancreatitis | 4 SAEs: parotiditis, nausea, vomiting, neutropenic fever ↑Ketones in compliant ppts (median 24 days, range 19–25 days) ↑BHB levels in compliant ppts (median 5 wks, range 4-5wks) ↔ lipid panel test at 3wks ↑ Serum oxidative stress markers with increasing days on KD |
| Renda 2015 and Dardis, 2017, USA [ | Phase 1/2 trial with single assignment | 14 Mean age 45y (range 37-63y) Brain cancer | 4:1 KD* for 8 wks during concurrent radiation and chemotherapy, followed by a 1:1 diet during adjuvant temozolomide chemotherapy | 47% recruitment 14% stopped due to tolerability Trial terminated early (intended sample size 40) | No weight loss > 10% of baseline (NB - only reported in preliminary results from 6 ppts) | 29% reported nausea |
| Rieger 2010 and Rieger, [ | Pilot study with single assignment | 20 Mean age 55y (range 30-72y) Brain cancer | KD: < 60 g/day CHO consumed with 500 ml highly fermented yoghurt drinks and 2 plant oils daily. Followed diet for 6–8 wks alone and for a further 6–8 wks either alone or during salvage chemotherapy ( | 15% discontinued after 2–3 wks (diet negatively affecting QoL) | ↓ body weight (− 2.2%) at 6–8 wks No SAEs attributable to diet | No grade 3 AEs 12 out of 13 evaluable ppts achieved ketosis (73% of urine samples had detectable ketosis) ↔ blood glucose and HbA1c at 6–8 wks |
| Zahra, 2017, USA [ | Phase 1 trial with single assignment | 9 Age range 51-83y Non small cell lung cancer ( Pancreatic cancer ( | 4:1 KD: 90% fat, 8% protein,2% CHO (KetoCal powder + food provided). KD 2 days prior to chemo-radiotherapy until end of treatment (6wks for lung and 5wks for pancreatic) | 71% withdrawal in lung cancer ppts: Difficulty complying ( 50% withdrawal in pancreatic cancer ppts: Grade 3 dehydration ( Average time on diet: 16.9 days (0–42) for lung and 21 days (8–34) for pancreatic cancer ppts | ↓body weight in lung (−6%) and pancreatic (−9.75%) cancer ppts | Grade 3/4 nausea ( Ketosis achieved in 89% Ketosis maintained in 33% ↔ blood glucose ↑ median plasma protein carbonyl content (nmol/mg) from pre- to post- diet (1.0 vs ≈ 1.4, |
| Artzi, 2017, Israel [ | Non randomised trial | 9 (5 in IG, 4 in CG) IG: mean age 51y (range 37–69y) CG: mean age 46y (range 27–64y) Brain cancer | 4:1 KD using KetoCal® formula for 2–31 months Bevacizumab, temozolomide or rindopepimut | 40% adherence (self-report and urine ketones; ppt considered adherent when ketone level was > 2 urine ketosis) | 80% tolerance (tolerability criteria not defined) | Evidence of ketone bodies within the brain found in 67% of cases and 0% of controls |
| Champ, 2014, USA [ | Retrospective case control study | 53 (6 cases, 47 controls) Mean age 54y (range 34-62y) Grade 3–4 glioblastoma | “Patient driven KD” – CHO levels below 50 g/day or 30 g/day if ketosis not reached Chemo-radiotherapy or adjuvant chemotherapy | NR | Grade 1 constipation ( Grade 2 fatigue ( No grade 3 toxicity | Confirmed ketosis in all cases ↓mean glucose in cases from 142.5 mg/dl (range 82–181 mg/dl) to 84 mg/dl (range 76–93 mg/dl) ( |
| Klement, 2016, Germany [ | Case series | 6 Mean age 60y (range 40-74y) Breast ( | KD: 80% fat and < 50 g/day CHO during treatment (mean 48.2 days, range 32–73 days) Radiotherapy or chemo-radiotherapy | 100% adherence rate to < 50 g/day CHO consumption Average energy from fat 73% Low BHB and high glucose in some ppts self-reporting as adherent | KD more satiating than previous diet (self report) General subjective feeling on diet rated as “good” 100% reported they would continue with a low CHO/KD after RT ↓ weight (kg/wk) in 33% ↓FM in 50% ↔ absolute FFM ↑ FFM relative to body weight in 50% | ↑ (worsening) symptom scores for fatigue, nausea/vomiting, appetite loss, diarrhoea ↑ in BHB ↔ glucose ↔ global health status and total functional scores |
| Attar [ | Retrospective review | 13 Age range 23-72y (mean NR) Recurrent brain cancer | Modified Atkins Diet: up to 60 g/day carbohydrate (2–5% total calories) from 1 to 21 months 9 on chemotherapy | 85% adherence (range 1–21 months) | 2 discontinued: weight loss ( 1 SAE: renal calculus at 11 months | 100% achieved ketosis |
| Randazzo, 2015, USA [ | Retrospective data registry review | 596 (81 cases, 515 controls) Mean age 49.6y (range NR) Brain cancer | Self-administered “special diets” including KD, Low CHO, vegetarian/vegan Usual care | NR | NR | NR – data not stratified by diet type |
*4:1 KD: A ketogenic diet consisting of 80% energy intake from fat
↑ = increase/higher
↓ = reduction/lower
↔ = no change/no difference
≈ = approximate
Where absolute figures were provided, %s have been calculated to aid comparison
Abbreviations: AEs Adverse Events, BHB Beta-hydroxybutyrate, CG Control Group, CHO Carbohydrate, DLT Dose Limiting Toxicities, DR Dietary Restriction, FM Fat Mass, FFM Fat Free Mass, HbA1c Glycated Haemoglobin, HPD highest posterior density interval, IG Intervention Group, IGF Insulin-like Growth Factor, IGFBP Insulin-like Growth Factor Binding Protein, NR Not Reported, PEG Percutaneous Endoscopic Gastrostomy, Ppt Participant, QoL Quality of Life, RCT Randomised Controlled Trial, SAEs Serious Adverse Events
Protein restriction results
| Reference (author, year) | Design | Population (No. of participants, age, site/lesion type) | Intervention (DR intervention, corresponding cancer treatment) | Feasibility | Tolerance | Treatment effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eitan, 2017, USA [ | RCT | 38 (19 IG, 19 CG) Mean age 59.26 ± 7.5y Prostate cancer | Protein restricted diet (0.8 g protein kg − 1 lean body mass) Awaiting surgery (43 ± 11 days on diet) | NR | NR | ↔ EV size in either arm ↑ Levels of EV-associated LeR ↑ Y/S IRS1 ratio in neuronal-enriched EVs in IG vs CG ↓Body weight (kg) (− 2.62 ± 2.18 |
| Durando, 2008, France [ | Phase 1 clinical trial with single allocation | 10 Median 68y (range 35-76y) 9 metastatic melanoma, 1 recurrent glioma | MET-free diet ranging from 1 to 4 days over 4 cycles of cystemustine chemotherapy | Ppts consumed 72.4% ± 31.5% of the MET-free diet administered | ↔ BMI, plasma albumin or NRI | ↓MET conc., optimal depletion obtained on day 1 (− 40.7 ± 36.9% Nitrogen balance (g/24 h) stable and negative during MET-free diet (− 2.24 ± 3.16) ↓Daily 3MH:creatinin ratio from 29.9 ± 14.9 × 10–3 at D0 to 15.9 ± 4.9 × 10–3 at D4 ( Grade 3 thrombocytopenia (33%), neutropenia (33%) and leucopenia (20%) |
| Durando, 2010, France [ | Feasibility study with single arm assignment | 11 Median age 70y (range 48-78y) Metastatic colorectal cancer | MET-free diet for 3 days over 3 cycles of FOLFOX chemotherapy | Patients consumed 92.5% ± 21.8% of the MET-free diet administered | ↔ BMI: 24.6 ± 3.vs 24.3 ± 2.9 ( ↔ plasma albumin: 36.0 ± 8.6 vs 36.7 ± 8.3 g/l ( | ↓MET concentrations. Day 1: − 58.1 ± 19.1%. Day 3: − 43.3% ± 13.9% Grade 3 neutropenia without fever (9%) No grade 3–4 non-haematological toxicities |
| Thivat, 2007, France [ | Phase 1 trial with single arm assignment | 6 Age NR 1 recurrent glioma, 5 metastatic melanoma | MET-free diet ranging from 1 to 4 days over 4 cycles of cystemustine chemotherapy | NR | NR | ↓Plasma MET of 48.5 ± 4% from 23.1 ± 1.6 μg/L to 11.3 ± 0.7 μg/L ( Grade 3–4 thrombocytopenia (33%), neutropenia (33%) and leucopenia (33%) ↓ MGMT activity (fmol/mg of protein) 553 ± 90 to 413 ± 59 ( No effect of duration of diet on MGMT activity after treatment |
| Thivat, 2009, France [ | Phase 2 trial with single arm assignment | 22 Median age 62y (range 35-76y) 20 melanoma, 2 glioma | 1 day MET-Free over 4 cycles cystemustine chemotherapy | Patients consumed 78 ± 27% of the MET-free diet administered | ↔ body weight (kg) (68.8 ± 11.5 vs. 67.8 ± 11.4, | ↓Plasma MET of 53.1 ± 21.8% after 4 h Grade 3–4 thrombocytopenia (36%), neutropenia (27%) and leucopenia (27%) |
↑ = increase
↓ = reduction
↔ = no change
≈ = approximate
Where absolute figures were provided, %s have been calculated to aid comparison
Abbreviations: BMI Body Mass Index, CG Control Group, DR Dietary Restriction, EV Extracellular Vesicles, FM Fat Mass, IG Intervention Group, Y/S IRS1 Insulin Receptor Substrate, LeR Leptin receptor, MET Methionine, MGMT DNA repair protein O(6)-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase, NR Not Reported, NRI Nutrition Risk Index, Ppts Participants, RCT Randomised Controlled Trial, 3MH Urinary 3-methylhistidine
Fasting results
| Reference (author, year) | Design | Population (no. of participants, cancer site, treatment) | Intervention (DR intervention, corresponding cancer treatment) | Feasibility | Tolerance | Treatment effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| De Groot 2013 and 2015, Netherlands [ | Pilot RCT | 13 (7 IG, 6 CG) IG: Median age 51y (range 47-64y) CG: Median age 52y (range 44-69y) Stage 2–3 breast cancer | 48 h fast (24 h before until 24 h after start of chemotherapy) 3 weekly (neo) adjuvant TAC-chemotherapy | 15% withdrawal | NR | ↑ median blood glucose (mmol/L); IG: 5.2 to 6.8 ( ↓ mean IGF-1 (nmol/L) of 17% in IG (23.7 to 19.6, ↔ median insulin (mU/L) in IG, ↑ in CG group ↔ TSH (mU/L) in IG: 1.49 to 0.42, ↓ in CG: 1.38 to 0.61 ( ↔ in IGF-BP3 or FT4 ↑ erythrocytes in IG (Day 7: ↑ thrombocytes in IG ( ↔ leukocytes or neutrophils ↔ self-report side effects |
| Dorff, 2016 and Quinn, 2013, USA [ | Dose escalation | 20 Median age 61y (range 31–75y) Any cancer | 3 cohorts fasted before chemotherapy for 24, 48 and 72 h (divided as 48 pre-chemo and 24 post-chemo) Platinum based chemotherapy | Adherence: 24 h fast: 67%, 48 h fast: 83%, 72 h fast 57% | Grade 1/2 fatigue, headache, dizziness, hypoglycaemia, weight loss, hyponatremia and hypotension No grade 3/4 fasting-related toxicities 5% failed to regain 25% of weight lost | ↓ IGF1. 24 h fast: Cycle 1: − 30% (− 12 to − 44%) Cycle 2: − 31% (− 45% to − 13%) 48 h fast: Cycle 1: − 33% (− 45% to − 18%) Cycle 2: − 20% (− 37 to 1%) 72 h fast: Cycle 1: − 8% (− 24 to 13%) Cycle 2: 16% (− 5 to − 42%) ↔ glucose ↓ mean insulin. 24 h fast: − 56%. 48 h fast: − 27%. 72 h fast: − 42% at 48 h (data at 72 h NR) ↓ DNA damage in 48 h and 72 h, but not 24 h fast ↓ nausea. 24 h fast: 100%, 48 h fast: 87%, 72 h fast: 43% ( ↓ vomiting. 24 h fast: 83%, 48 h fast: 43%, 72 h fast: 0% ( ↔ neutropenia. 24 h fast: 67%, 48 h fast: 14%, 72 h fast: 29% ( |
| Mas, 2017, France [ | Qualitative | 15 Age NR Breast cancer | Self-administered fast concurrent to chemotherapy | Main motivation to limit chemotherapy side effects Effect of fasting on tumour was not a motivation (patients felt cancer-free following surgery) Offered a chance for ppts to take an active role in treatment | 13% reported AEs which stopped them fasting | Fasting was a positive experience that reduced the side effects of chemotherapy and reinforced self-esteem |
| Safdie, 2009 and [ | Case series | 10 Median age 61y (range 44-78y) Breast ( | Self-administered fast ranging from 48 to 140 h prior to and/or 5–56 h following chemotherapy | NR | Low grade dizziness, hunger, and headaches reported No grade 3/4 toxicities Weight loss recovered in “most” patients | ↓ in fatigue ( |
↑ = increase/higher
↓ = reduction/lower
↔ = no change/no difference
Where absolute figures were provided, %s have been calculated to aid comparison
Abbreviations: AEs Adverse Events, CG Control Group, CHO Carbohydrate, DR Dietary Restriction, FT4 thyroxine, GI, gastrointestinal, IG Intervention Group, IGF Insulin-like Growth Factor, IGFBP Insulin-like Growth Factor Binding Protein, NR Not Reported, RCT Randomised Controlled Trial, SAEs Serious Adverse Events, TSH Thyroid Stimulating Hormone
Combined intervention results
| Reference (author, year) | Design | Population (No. of participants, age, site/lesion type) | Intervention (DR intervention, corresponding cancer treatment) | Feasibility | Tolerance | Treatment effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Freedland, 2016, USA [ | RCT | 40 (19 IG, 21 CG) Age NR Prostate cancer | Low CHO diet (< 20 g/day) combined with moderate physical activity increased by 30 min/day for 5 days/wk. Concurrent to ADT | 81% retention | Mild headaches main side effect | ↓ HOMA by 19% in IG compared to 7% in CG ( ↓ weight (kg) of 9.3 in IG compared to ↑ of 1.3 in CG ( ↓ FM of 16.2% in IG compared to ↑ of 11.0% in CG ( ↑ bone mineral content of 0.1% in IG compared to ↓2.3% in CG ( ↓ PSA 99% in both groups ( |
| Reinwald, 2015 and Branca, [ | Case report | 1 Age 66y Breast cancer | An isocaloric KD: special amino acid formula combined with probiotic yoghurt containing vitD binding protein macrophage activating factors and injections of vitD, oleic acid and vitD binding protein 3 weeks prior to surgery | NR | NR | Change in gene expression to HER2 -ve. Increase in progesterone expression (20 vs < 1%) No invasion of blood or lymph vessels around the tumour ER and Ki-67 markers were unchanged |
| Iyikesici, 2017, Turkey [ | Case report | 1 Age 29y Triple negative breast cancer | Chemotherapy administered after a 12 h fast followed by 5–10 units of insulin. Patient also consumed a KD for duration of treatment | Patient adhered to KD (urinary ketones present at each visit) | NR | Pathological complete response |
| Zuccoli, 2010, Italy [ | Case report | 1 Age 65y Brain cancer | Self-administered post-operative fast followed by a calorie restricted KD with chemo-radiotherapy. KD: 600ckal/day using Keto-Cal® 4:1 supplemented with multivitamins. After approx. 2 months on restricted KD, patient switched to a calorie restricted non-KD (600 kcal/day) for 5 months. | NR | Karnofsky performance status: 100% during diet Hyperuricemia on restricted KD so patient was switched to a non-KD calorie restricted diet. Hypoproteinemia on restricted diet, resolved by increasing dietary protein to 7 g/day for 1 month. ↓ bodyweight (− 9%) after fast and − 22% after restricted diet | ↓ blood glucose: −50% after fast and − 53.3% after restricted diet ↑ ketones: from 0 (baseline) to 2.5 mmol/L after fast and after restricted diet |
↑ = increase
↓ = reduction
Where absolute figures were provided, %s have been calculated to aid comparison
Abbreviations: ADT Androgen Deprivation Therapy, CG Control Group, CHO Carbohydrate, DR Dietary Restriction, ER Estrogen receptor, FM Fat Mass, HER-2 Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2, HOMA Homeostatic model assessment, IG Intervention Group, KD Ketogenic Diet, m months, NR Not Reported, PSA Prostate-Specific Antigen, RCT Randomised Controlled Trial, VitD Vitamin D
Planned/ongoing trials registered in clinicaltrials.gov and ISRCTN databases
| Trial Registration | Trial design | Participants (target recruitment number and type of cancer) | Primary outcomes | Planned start and end dates |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ketogenic Diets | ||||
| NCT03285152 | Feasibility RCT | 30 Endometrial | No. of patients that complete the study | Aug 2017- Aug 2019 |
| NCT02983942 | Pilot RCT | 50 Primary Central Nervous System Lymphoma | No. and incidence of treatment related AEs | Jan 2017 – Dec 2019 |
| SRCTN71665562 | Pilot RCT | 12 Glioblastoma | Retention rate | Jul 2016 – June 2019 |
| NCT02302235 | RCT | 42 Glioblastoma | 1. Survival time 2. Time to progression (MRI assessed) 3. Incidence of AEs | Feb 2014 – Dec 2018 |
| NCT01754350 | RCT | 50 Glioblastoma | Progression-free-survival rates 6 months after reirradiation | May 2013 – June 2018 |
| NCT03278249 | Feasibility trial (single arm) | 30 Glioblastoma | Ketosis (measured by serum BHB) | Sep 2017 – Jan 2021 |
| NCT01865162 | Pilot trial (single arm) | 6 Glioblastoma | Safety evaluation | Jan 2013 – Jan 2019 |
| NCT01535911 | Pilot trial (single arm) | 16 Glioblastoma | Brain tumour size response (MRI assessed) | Apr 2012 – June 2019 |
| NCT03451799 | Clinical trial (single arm) | Glioblastoma | Safety assessed by weight loss and AEs | Apr 2018 – Sep 2020 |
| NCT02964806 | Crossover trial | 30 Pancreaticobiliary Cancer | Diet intake rate | Nov 2016 – Oct 2017 |
| NCT02939378 | Non-randomised trial (2 arms) | 60 Glioblastoma | No. of participants with AEs | Oct 2016 – Dec 2018 |
| NCT03535701 | Non-randomised trial (2 arms) | 15 Breast | 1. Adherence 2. Change in psychosocial measures 3. Change in physiologic outcomes | Oct 2017 – Aug 2019 |
| NCT03194516 | Observational | 12 Prostate | Weight loss at 8 weeks | June 2017 – May 2021 |
| Short-term Fast | ||||
| SRCTN17994717 | Feasibility RCT | 30 Colorectal | Adherence, recruitment, retention and data completion rates Acceptability and tolerability | Oct 2017 – Apr 2021 |
| Fasting Mimicking Diets | ||||
| NCT02126449 | RCT | 250 Breast | 1. Rate of grade 3/4 toxicity 2. Rate of pCR | Feb 2014 – Dec 2019 |
| NCT03700437 | RCT | 40 Lung | Effect of diet on circulating tumour cells | Oct 2018 – Dec 2020 |
| NCT03340935 | Feasibility trial (single arm) | 85 Any cancer | AEs | Feb 2017 – June 2018 |
| NCT03595540 | Pilot trial (single arm) | 60 Breast and colorectal | 1. % diet consumed 2. Diet related AEs | Nov 2017 – Sep 2020 |
| NCT03454282 | Clinical trial (single arm) | 100 Breast and melanoma | Change in peripheral blood mononuclear cell | May 2018 – Dec 2020 |
| Intermittent Fasts | ||||
| NCT03162289 | RCT | 150 Breast | Change in FACT-G Quality of Life score | May 2017 – May 2022 |
| NCT02710721 | RCT | 60 Prostate | Change in FACT-P Quality of Life score | April 2016 – Dec 2019 |
| Ketogenic Diet combined with Short-Term Fast | ||||
| NCT02286167 | Clinical trial (single arm) | 25 Glioblastoma Multiforme | Dietary adherence rates | Nov 2014 – April 2019 |
Abbreviations: AE Adverse Events, BHB Beta-hydroxybutyrate, MRI Magnetic Resonance Imaging, pCR Pathological Complete Response, RCT Randomised Controlled Trial