| Literature DB >> 32942683 |
Chia-Chun Tang1, Hsi Chen1, Tai-Chung Huang2, Wei-Wen Wu1, Jing-Mei Lin3, Feng-Ming Tien2.
Abstract
Recent preclinical studies have shown the potential benefits of short-term calorie reduction (SCR) on cancer treatment. In this integrative review, we aimed to identify and synthesize current evidence regarding the feasibility, process, and effects of SCR in cancer patients receiving chemotherapy. PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Ovid Medline, PsychINFO, and Embase were searched for original research articles using various combinations of Medical Subject Heading terms. Among the 311 articles identified, seven studies met the inclusion criteria. The majority of the reviewed studies were small randomized controlled trials or cohort study with fair quality. The results suggest that SCR is safe and feasible. SCR is typically arranged around the chemotherapy, with the duration ranging from 24 to 96 h. Most studies examined the protective effects of SCR on normal cells during chemotherapy. The evidence supports that SCR had the potential to enhance both the physical and psychological wellbeing of patients during chemotherapy. SCR is a cost-effective intervention with great potential. Future well-controlled studies with sufficient sample sizes are needed to examine the full and long-term effects of SCR and its mechanism of action.Entities:
Keywords: calorie restriction; cancer; chemotherapy; fasting; integrative review; short-term calorie reduction
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32942683 PMCID: PMC7551502 DOI: 10.3390/nu12092823
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Searched databases, searching strategies, and the number of initial results.
| Databases | Searching Strategies: Combination of Medical Subheadings | Initial Results |
|---|---|---|
| PubMed | (“fasting” OR “calorie restricted”) AND “chemotherapy” | 238 |
| Ovid Medline | (“fasting” OR “diet, carbohydrate-restricted” OR “calorie restriction”) AND (“maintenance chemotherapy” OR “induction chemotherapy” OR “consolidation chemotherapy” OR “chemotherapy, adjuvant” OR “chemotherapy, cancer, regional perfusion”) | 9 |
| CINAHL | (“fasting” OR (“preprocedural Fasting” OR “restricted diet” OR “diet, reducing” OR “diet, low carbohydrate”) AND (“chemotherapy, cancer” OR “chemotherapy, adjuvant” OR “chemotherapy care (Saba CCC)” OR “chemotherapy management (Iowa NIC)” OR “antineoplastic agents, combined”) | 7 |
| PsychINFO | (“calories” OR “dietary restraint”) AND “chemotherapy” | 38 |
| Embase | “caloric restriction” AND “cancer chemotherapy” | 19 |
Level of Evidence.
| Level | Definition |
|---|---|
| I | Randomized controlled trial |
| II | Prospective cohort study or Poor-quality randomized controlled trial |
| III | Case-control study or Retrospective cohort study |
| IV | Case series |
| V | Expert opinion |
Note. Modified from Wright, Swiontkowski, and Heckman (2003) [24].
Figure 1PRISMA Diagram of Search Results and Screening Process.
Information of Reviewed Articles: Type of Design, Method, and Maine Results.
| First Author, Year (Country) | Goal: Research Design | Sample Size, Population, Exclusion Criteria | Calorie Reduction Plan | Chemotherapy Regimen | Measuring Time and Outcome Measurements | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dorff, 2016 (USA) | Determine the safety/feasibility of fasting prior to C/T: Cohort study (24/48/72 h.) |
various cancer types/stages Exclusion: DM, BM ≤ 20.5, recent BW loss > 10 kg |
≤2 days of Platinum-based combination C/T without concurrent radiation May have begun C/T but still have 2 or more cycles Standard antiemetic |
Measuring before C/T, after fast, and 24 h after C/T completion: Nutrition and metabolism status: Prealbumin, Insulin, Glucose, Ketones (β-hydroxybutyrate) Side effects and fasting-related toxicities (CTCAE v4.0) Hematological function Endocrine parameters: IGF-1, IGFBPs DNA damage: peripheral blood mononuclear cells Treatment outcome: pathologic responses |
Safety and tolerance of SCR: safe and feasible Reasons for non-compliance: forget, social constraints, change of C/T plan, fail to regain weight Nutrition and metabolism status *: β-hydroxybutyrate decreased in the 24-h group while it increased in 48- and 72-h groups Main effects of SCR: Effects on side effects, symptoms, and QOL *: decreasing C/T-related toxicity (nausea and vomiting) in all groups Effects on hematological function: Insignificant trend of decreasing C/T-related grade 3–4 neutropenia Effects on endocrine parameters: decreased but not-significant trend of IGF-1 Effects on DNA damage in healthy cells *: mitigated in subjects who fasted for ≥48 h. Effects of the treatment: no effects | |
| Safdie, 2009 (USA) | Examine the safety of fasting before and after chemotherapy: Case study |
Various cancer types/stages | (Vary by cases) | Individualized |
At unspecified time points:
Self-reported symptoms: fatigue, weakness, hair loss, headaches, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal cramps, mouth sores, dry mouth, short-term memory impairment, numbness, tingling, neuropathy motor Hematological function: WBC, ANC, platelets Treatment outcomes: CT-PET scan (one case) |
Safety and tolerance of SCR: well-tolerated Side effects: slight dizziness, hunger, and headache which did not interfere with daily activities. Nutrition and metabolism status: weight loss was about 6–7 pounds which were regained quickly after resuming normal diet Main effects of SCR: Effects on side effects, symptoms, and QOL: self-reported reduction in multiple chemotherapy-induced side effects Effects on hematological function: better recovery of blood counts, including less severe or shorter nadir of WBC/ANC/platelets Effects of the treatment: better response to C/T in one patient |
| Bauersfeld, 2018 (Germany) | Examine the feasibility and effects of QOL of short-term fasting during C/T: Randomized, individually controlled trial |
Breast/ovarian cancer Exclusion: BMI < 19, WHO performance status > 2, life expectancy < 3 months, DM, MI, stroke or pulmonary embolism within 3 months, unstable heart disease, renal failure, eating disorder, dementia, psychosis, impaired physical mobility |
4–6 cycles of C/T: Taxanes, Platinum, Alkylating, Anthracycline, Antimetabolites, IgG1 antibody Standard antiemetics and medication: dexamethasone and 5HT3 inhibitors |
Baseline and 8 days after each C/T cycle: Side effects and fasting-related toxicities: FACIT-G, FACIT-F During and at the end of fasting: Adverse events |
Safety and tolerance of SCR: safe and well tolerated. Reasons for non-compliance: headache, hyperventilation, weakness, aversion to fasting nutrition (n = 5, 10%) Side effects: headache, hunger, nausea after intake of broth or juices, and orthostatic reaction; all were of low grade which did not interfere with daily activities Nutrition and metabolism status: no significant changes in weight More than 80% participants agreed that the fast was effective and wanted to continue the practice during C/T Main effects of SCR: Effects on side effects, symptoms, and QOL: less compromised QOL and reduced fatigue (Group A demonstrated a statistically significant and clinically meaningful benefits of fast on QOL and fatigue, while Group B only show clinically meaningful difference of the positive effect on QOL for fast intervention) | |
| de Groot, 2015 (The Netherlands) | Identify the effects of 48 h fasting on C/T, including side effects, hematological parameters in breast cancer patient receiving TAC: Randomized controlled trial |
Stage II/III breast cancer Exclusion: BMI < 19, WHO performance status > 2, life expectancy < 3 months, adequate function of bone marrow, liver, renal, and heart, DM |
6 cycles of (neo)-adjuvant TAC (docetaxel/doxorubicin/cyclophosphamide) Anti-emetic agent and medication: dexamethasone, 5-HT3 receptor antagonist |
Baseline (2 weeks before C/T), day 0 (prior to C/T) plus 30 min after C/T completion and day 7 of administration (only for hematological function, CRP, and DNA damage): Nutrition and metabolic status: insulin, glucose Hematological function: erythrocyte-, thrombocytes-, leukocyte count DNA damage: γ-H2AX Endocrine parameters: IGF-1, IGFBP3, TSH, triiodothyronine, free thyroxine Inflammatory response: CRP During C/T: self-reported side effects and CTCAE |
Safety and tolerance of SCR: Participates were motivated to fast and the fast was well-tolerated and safe Reasons of non-compliance: 2 withdraw at the 3rd cycle of C/T due to non-fasting-related signs (i.e., pyrosis and recurrent febrile neutropenia) Nutrition and metabolism status: no significant changes Main effects of SCR: Effects on side effects, symptoms, and QOL: no significant effects Effects on hematological function *: protect from C/T-related toxicity Effects on endocrine parameters and inflammatory response: not significant Effects on DNA damage in healthy cells (lymphocytes and myeloid cells) *: protect and promote recovery | |
| de Groot, 2020 (The Netherlands) | Evaluate the impact of FMD on toxicity as well as on the radiological and pathological response to chemotherapy for breast cancer: Randomized controlled trial |
HER-2 (-), stage II/III breast cancer with WHO performance stage 0–2, BMI < 19 kg/m2 Exclusion: DM, allergies to designed food content, function impairment (bone marrow reserve, liver, renal, cardiac) |
8 cycles of (neo)-adjuvant (docetaxel/doxorubicin/cyclophosphamide) or 6 cycles of (neo)-adjuvant FEC-T (5-fluorouracil, epirubicin, cyclophosphamide) Dexamethasone was given before C/T only for control group |
Baseline (day-1 or 0 of each chemotherapy): Nutrition and metabolic status: insulin, glucose, ketone Endocrine parameters: IGF-1 Baseline (day-1 or 0 of the first cycle of chemotherapy) & 3 h after start of C/T: DNA damage: γ-H2AX Baseline, halfway, at the end of therapy, and 6-month follow-up: EORTC QLQ-C30, During C/T: CTCAE v4.03 Halfway and at the end of the therapy: pCR Halfway, at the end of the therapy, and 6-month follow-up: distress thermometer |
Safety and tolerance of SCR: FMD was well-tolerated and safe Reasons of non-compliance: the compliance decreased along with the C/T cycles (81.5% to 20% from cycle 1 to 8). The main reason of non-compliance was dislike of distinct components of the diet Side-effects: no differences in toxicity Nutrition and metabolism status *: lower insulin and glucose, ketones in urine (+) Main effects of SCR: Effects on side effects, symptoms, and QOL: not significant Effects on endocrine parameters * and inflammatory response: lower IGF-1 Effects on DNA damage in healthy cells *: protect and promote recovery Pathological response *: better pCR | |
| Zorn, 2020 (German) | Evaluate the influence of 96-h fasting on chemotherapy-induced toxicities in patients with gynecological cancer: controlled cross-over trial |
Gynecological cancer Exclusion: malnutrition, eating disorders, DM, gout, severe cardiovascular disease, pregnancy or lactation, parental nutrition, administration of steroids or IGF-1 receptor blockers |
Paclitaxel/carboplatin Epirubicin/cyclophosphamide Docetaxel/cyclophosphamide |
Baseline (before C/T), at each C/T, 3 weeks after the final C/T cycle: Side effects and fasting-related toxicities: self-reported, CTCAE v4.0, EORTC QLQ-C30, EORTC QLQ-CIPN20, FACIT-Fatigue v 4.0 Nutrition and metabolic status: insulin, body composition Hematological function: erythrocyte-, thrombocytes-, leukocyte count Endocrine parameters: IGF-1, TSH, triiodothyronine, free thyroxine Inflammatory response: CRP |
Safety and tolerance of SCR: well-tolerated and safe Reasons for non-compliance: 2 withdraw because of fating-related discomfort and 19 withdraw due to non-fasting-related reasons Side-effects: hunger, dizziness, weakness, and headache were mild Nutrition and metabolism status *: reduction in insulin, BIA fat mass, weight (<5%), mean BIA cell mass, mean BIA phase angle; increase in BIA extracellular cell mass Main effects of SCR: Effects on side effects, symptoms, and QOL *: decreased symptoms such as stomatitis, headache, weakness, and overall symptom severity Effects on hematological function *: decreased MCV and MCH Effects on endocrine parameters and inflammatory response *: reduction in IGF-1, triiodothyronine; increase in free thyroxine | |
| Mas, 2019 (France) | Explore the motivations to fast among cancer patients: Qualitative study |
Breast cancer | Not mentioned |
Qualitative description of reason to fast, modalities of the fast, experience of fasting, related social support, barriers and facilitators of fasting Satisfaction |
Safety and tolerance of SCR: Patients believed that fasting is an efficacious non-conventional medicine that helps to reduce side effects of C/T for breast cancer. Patients expressed high level of satisfaction toward fasting. Main effects of SCR: Six themes emerge: Main reason to fast: to lower the negative side effects of C/T, to regain control/act proactively during treatment (thus reduce the feelings of uncertainty and anxiety), improve C/T efficacy Alternative authorities to the oncologist: conventional health care professions and other cancer patients’ experience of fasting Adapting the fast to social and lifestyle constraints: fasts were always performed with C/T Fasting effects felt during chemotherapy: most of the patients reported positive physiological effects (especially nausea and vomiting) and about half experience psychological benefits Barriers to (uncertainty of the effect of fasting, interference of meal sharing social life) and facilitators (anxiety regarding hospitalization, positive social support) of fasting during C/T Seeking a more integrative medicine (although not supported by medical providers) |
Note. 1. DM, Diabetes Mellitus; SCR, Shor-term Calorie Reduction; BMI, Body Mass Index; BW, Body Weight; kg, kilogram; kcal, kilocalorie; h, hour; n, size of sample; CTCAE, Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events; QoL, Quality Of Life; WBC, White Blood Cell; ANC, Absolute Neutrophil Counts; CT-PET, Computed Tomography-Positron Emission Tomography; MI, Myocardial Infarction; TAC, docetaxel/doxorubicin/cyclophosphamide; IGFBP3, Insulin Growth Factor Binding Protein 3; C/T, Chemotherapy; TSH, Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone; CRP, C-Reactive Protein; IGF-1, Insulin-like Growth Factor-1; IGFBPs, IGF Binding Proteins; NPO, Nothing by Mouth; cL, centilitre; FMD, fast mimic diet; pCR, pathological complete response; CTCAE, Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events; EORTC QLQ C30, The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer quality of life questionnaire; EORTC QLQ CIPN20, The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer quality of life Chemotherapy-Induced Peripheral Neuropathy; FACIT-F, the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue; MCV, Mean corpuscular volume; MCH, Mean Corpuscular Hemoglobin. 2. * indicated that findings reached statistical or clinical significance.
Quality and Evidence Level of Cohort Study and Case Report.
| Quality Rating Criteria for Cohort Study | Study | Quality Rating Criteria for Case Report | Study |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dorff, 2016 | Safdie, 2009 | ||
| Research question/objective was clearly stated | Yes | Research question/objective was clearly stated | No |
| Study population was clearly specified/defined | Yes | Study population was clearly specified/defined | Yes |
| Participation rate of eligible persons was ≥50% | Unclear | Cases were consecutive | No |
| Prespecified Inclusion/exclusion criteria | Yes | Subjects were comparable | No |
| Justification of sample size/power/variance/effect size | No | Intervention was clearly described | Yes |
| Exposure(s) measured prior to outcome(s) evaluation | Yes | Clearly defined, valid and reliable outcome measures | No |
| Sufficient timeframe to see a possible association | Yes | Adequate length of follow-up | Yes |
| Examine different exposure levels as related to the outcome | Yes | Well-described statistical methods | Not applicable |
| Clearly defined, valid and reliable exposure measures | Yes | Well-described results | Yes |
| Assessed the exposure(s) more than once over time | Yes | ||
| Clearly defined valid and reliable outcome measures | Yes | ||
| Outcome assessors were blinded to the exposure status of participants | Unclear | ||
| Loss to follow-up was 20% or less | Yes | ||
| Key potential confounding variables measured and adjusted statistically | No | ||
| Suggesting Quality (% of criteria met) | Fair (71%) | Suggesting Quality (% of criteria met) | Fair (50%) |
| Level of Evidence | II | Level of Evidence | IV |
Note. Level of quality was defined as: Good Quality (75–100% criteria met), Fair (50–74% criteria met), Poor (25–49% criteria met).
Quality and Evidence Level of Randomized Controlled Trial.
| Quality Rating Criteria | Studies | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bauersfeld, 2018 | de Groot, 2015 | de Groot, 2020 | Zorn, 2020 | |
| Study was described as randomized or an RCT | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
| Adequate randomization | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
| Concealed treatment allocation | Yes | Unclear | Yes | Unclear |
| Study participants and providers were blinded to group assignment | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| People assessing the outcomes were blinded to the assignments | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Unclear |
| Groups were similar at baseline on important characteristics | No | Yes | Yes | No |
| Overall drop-out rate at endpoint was ≤20% for treatment group | No | No | No | No |
| Differential drop-out rate between groups at endpoint was ≤15% or lower | Yes | Yes | No | No |
| Adherence to the intervention protocols were high | No | Yes | No | No |
| Other interventions were avoided or similar in the groups | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Outcomes were assessed using valid and reliable measures | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Sufficient sample size to be able to detect a difference with ≥80% power | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Outcomes reported or subgroups analyzed were prespecified | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes |
| All randomized participants were analyzed in the original group (intention-to-treat analysis) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Suggesting Level of Quality (% of criteria met) | Fair (62%) | Fair (62%) | Good (77%) | Poor (38%) |
| Level of Evidence | II | II | I | II |
Note. Level of quality was defined as: Good Quality (75–100% criteria met), Fair (50–74% criteria met), Poor (25–49% criteria met).