Burns C Patrick, Halabi Susan, Clamon Gerald, Kaplan Ellen, Hohl Raymond J, Atkins James N, Schwartz Michael A, Wagner Brett A, Paskett Electra
Department of Internal Medicine, The University of Iowa Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, USA.
Cancer. 2004 Jul 15;101(2):370-8. doi: 10.1002/cncr.20362.
The authors undertook a multiinstitutional Phase II cooperative group study to examine the potential of oral fish oil fatty acid supplements administered at high doses to slow weight loss and to improve quality of life in patients with malignancy-related cachexia.
Patients with advanced malignancy and weight loss > or = 2% of body weight in the preceding month took concentrated, high-dose omega-3 fatty acid capsules (7.5 g eicosapentaenoic acid plus docosahexaenoic acid for a 70 kg individual) that were supplied by the National Institutes of Health.
Forty-three patients with moderate or severe malnutrition were enrolled. The median time receiving treatment was 1.2 months. For the 36 patients who took at least 1 capsule and did not have edema, there was a weight change ranging from -6.2 kg to +3.5 kg and an overall median weight loss of 0.8 kg. Twenty-four patients had weight stabilization (a gain of < or = 5% or a loss of < 5%), 6 patients gained > 5% of their body weight, and 6 patients lost > or = 5% of their body weight. There was marked variability in the tolerability of the capsules, and many patients had gastrointestinal side effects. There was a correlation between time receiving treatment and weight gain for the 22 patients who were able to tolerate the capsules for at least 1 month. Quality-of-life scores were superior for patients who gained weight.
A majority of patients did not gain weight, and in that sense, the results of the study were unfavorable. However, a small but definite subset of patients had weight stabilization or weight gain. This suggests that omega-3 fatty acids have potential utility at the study doses, which were more than twice the doses used in published Phase III studies.
作者开展了一项多机构的II期合作组研究,以检验高剂量口服鱼油脂肪酸补充剂减缓体重减轻及改善恶性肿瘤相关性恶病质患者生活质量的潜力。
患有晚期恶性肿瘤且前一个月体重减轻≥2%体重的患者服用由美国国立卫生研究院提供的浓缩高剂量ω-3脂肪酸胶囊(对于一名70千克的个体,含7.5克二十碳五烯酸加二十二碳六烯酸)。
43例中度或重度营养不良患者入组。接受治疗的中位时间为1.2个月。对于36例至少服用1粒胶囊且无水肿的患者,体重变化范围为-6.2千克至+3.5千克,总体中位体重减轻0.8千克。24例患者体重稳定(体重增加≤5%或体重减轻<5%),6例患者体重增加>5%,6例患者体重减轻≥5%。胶囊的耐受性存在显著差异,许多患者有胃肠道副作用。对于22例能够耐受胶囊至少1个月的患者,接受治疗的时间与体重增加之间存在相关性。体重增加的患者生活质量评分更高。
大多数患者体重未增加,从这个意义上讲,研究结果并不理想。然而,一小部分但明确的患者体重稳定或增加。这表明ω-3脂肪酸在本研究剂量下具有潜在效用,该剂量是已发表的III期研究中所用剂量的两倍多。