| Literature DB >> 32512833 |
Peter M Anderson1, Rajesh V Lalla2.
Abstract
Glutamine is a major dietary amino acid that is both a fuel and nitrogen donor for healing tissues damaged by chemotherapy and radiation. Evidence supports the benefit of oral (enteral) glutamine to reduce symptoms and improve and/or maintain quality of life of cancer patients. Benefits include not only better nutrition, but also decreased mucosal damage (mucositis, stomatitis, pharyngitis, esophagitis, and enteritis). Glutamine supplementation in a high protein diet (10 grams/day) + disaccharides, such as sucrose and/or trehalose, is a combination that increases glutamine uptake by mucosal cells. This increased topical effect can reduce painful mucosal symptoms and ulceration associated with chemotherapy and radiation in the head and neck region, esophagus, stomach and small intestine. Topical and oral glutamine seem to be the preferred routes for this amino acid to promote mucosal healing during and after cancer treatment.Entities:
Keywords: amino acid supplementation in cancer; chemotherapy associated malnutrition; glutamine; glutathione; mucositis; radiation injury; trehalose
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32512833 PMCID: PMC7352314 DOI: 10.3390/nu12061675
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Physical damage and amino acid malnutrition can both contribute to slow healing and worse mucosal injury from cancer chemotherapy and/or radiation. Dietary glutamine may ameliorate some of these side effects of cancer therapy.
Figure 2Pivotal role of glutamine stored in muscle (glutamine “bank”), normal high glutamine concentration in plasma, and liver amino acid metabolism (switch hitter) to facilitate steady state glutamine for mucosal health in (A) healthy anabolic state versus (B) during catabolic states including injury from cancer therapy, malnutrition, and tissue damage. In the catabolic state of mucositis from cancer therapy injury, topical glutamine + disaccharide can be helpful.
Chemotherapy drugs and radiation-associated^ side effects.
| Chemotherapy Drug | Cytopenias * | Mucositis +/− GI ** |
|---|---|---|
| Busulfan (BMT) | NLRP | 2+ |
| Carboplatin | NLRP | 2+ |
| Cisplatin | NLR | 4+ |
| Cyclophosphamide iv | NLRP | 2+ |
| Cyclophosphamide (oral) | NL | 0 |
| Cytarabine | NLRP | 1+ |
| Cytarabine (high dose) | NLRP | 4+ |
| Daunomycin | NLRP | 3+ |
| Dexamethasone | L | 0 |
| Docetaxel | NLRP | 2+ |
| Doxorubicin | NLRP | 3+ |
| Doxorubicin liposomes | minimal | 2+ |
| Etoposide (BMT) | NLRP | 4+ |
| Etoposide (oral) | NLRP | 1+ |
| Etoposide iv | NLRP | 1+ |
| Everolimus | L | 2+ |
| Gemcitabine | NLRP | 1+ |
| Ifosfamide | NLRP | 0 |
| Imatinib | minimal | 0 |
| Irinotecan | NLRP | 4+ |
| Melphalan (BMT) | NLRP | 4+ |
| Methotrexate (oral) | L | 1+ |
| Methotrexate (high dose) | NLRP | 4+ |
| NAB-Paclitaxel | NLRP | 1+ |
| Pazopanib | minimal | 2+ |
| Prednisone | L | 0 |
| ^Radiation to GI tract | L | <where beam is> |
| (mucosal surfaces) | ||
| Regorafenib | minimal | 3+ |
| Sirolimus (rapamycin) | L | 1+ |
| Sorafenib | NLRP | 1+ |
| Temozolomide | NLRP | 0 |
| Temsirolimus | NLRP | 3+ |
| Topotecan | NLRP | 2+ |
| Thiotepa (BMT) | NLRP | 4+ |
| ^Total body Irradiation | NLRP | 4+ |
| Vincristine | L | 0 |
| Vinorelbine | NL | 0 |
* Cytopenias: decreased N = Neutrophil, L = lymphocytes, R = red cells, P = platelets ** Mucositis + GI (anorexia, Nausea, vomiting, chemotherapy-associated diarrhea) 0 = none, 1 = occasional, 2 = common; 3 = very common 4 = severe.
Physiologic balancing act by glutamine. Damage Control + Tissue Regeneration and Tumor Suppression.
| Information About Glutamine in Tumor Versus Treatment Effectiveness | Reference(s) |
|---|---|
| Major tumor fuel is glucose, but glutamine can also be used | [ |
| Glutamine is a major fuel for lymphocytes and immune cells | [ |
| Glutamine is needed by enterocytes to maintain intestinal health | [ |
| Asparaginase which depletes glutamine in blood kills leukemia cells | [ |
| Asparaginase w/o glutaminase activity is also highly effective | [ |
| Glutamine effects glutathione levels (less in tumors, more in tissue) | [ |
| Increased killing of tumors with glutamine supplementation | [ |
| Glutamine is associated with less mucositis from chemotherapy | [ |
| Glutamine reduces radiation side effects (helps normal tissues recover) | [ |
| Glutamine’s decrease in squamous cell cancer incidence (cancer prevention) | [ |
Available supplements with glutamine in conjunction with cancer therapy.
| Nutrients with High Glutamine | Supplement or Product (Source) |
|---|---|
| Dietary: foods high in glutamine | high protein foods (meats, fish, eggs, nuts, beans, milk) |
| High-protein milk + protein powder | FairLife milk + carnation breakfast (Nestle) |
| Water + protein powder | Beneprotein (Nestle), Whey powder, or plant protein powder |
| Protein Drinks | Boost, Ensure, Core Power, Pediasure, Peptamen |
| NG and G-tube formulas | Nutren (Nestle), Vital (Abbott), Jevity (Carewell) |
| Glutamine added to nutrient powder | Juven (Abbott) |
| Glutamine powder + maltodextrin | Glutasolve (Nestle) |
| Glutamine + sucrose+ trehalose | Healios (Enlivity) |