Block Keith I, Koch Amanda C, Mead Mark N, Tothy Peter K, Newman Robert A, Gyllenhaal Charlotte
Institute for Integrative Cancer Research and Education, 1800 Sherman Avenue, Suite 350, Evanston, IL 60201, USA.
Cancer Treat Rev. 2007 Aug;33(5):407-18. doi: 10.1016/j.ctrv.2007.01.005. Epub 2007 Mar 23.
Much debate has arisen about whether antioxidant supplementation alters the efficacy of cancer chemotherapy. Some have argued that antioxidants scavenge the reactive oxygen species integral to the activity of certain chemotherapy drugs, thereby diminishing treatment efficacy. Others suggest antioxidants may mitigate toxicity and thus allow for uninterrupted treatment schedules and a reduced need for lowering chemotherapy doses. The objective of this study is to systematically review the literature in order to compile results from randomized trials that evaluate concurrent use of antioxidants with chemotherapy.
MEDLINE, Cochrane, CinAhl, AMED, AltHealthWatch and EMBASE databases were searched. Only randomized, controlled clinical trials that reported survival and/or tumor response were included in the final tally. The literature searches were performed in duplicate following a standardized protocol. No meta-analysis was performed due to heterogeneity of tumor types and treatment protocols used in trials that met the inclusion criteria.
Of 845 articles considered, 19 trials met the inclusion criteria. Antioxidants evaluated were: glutathione (7), melatonin (4), vitamin A (2), an antioxidant mixture (2), vitamin C (1), N-acetylcysteine (1), vitamin E (1) and ellagic acid (1). Subjects of most studies had advanced or relapsed disease.
None of the trials reported evidence of significant decreases in efficacy from antioxidant supplementation during chemotherapy. Many of the studies indicated that antioxidant supplementation resulted in either increased survival times, increased tumor responses, or both, as well as fewer toxicities than controls; however, lack of adequate statistical power was a consistent limitation. Large, well-designed studies of antioxidant supplementation concurrent with chemotherapy are warranted.
关于补充抗氧化剂是否会改变癌症化疗的疗效,已经引发了诸多争论。一些人认为抗氧化剂会清除某些化疗药物活性所必需的活性氧,从而降低治疗效果。另一些人则认为抗氧化剂可能会减轻毒性,从而使治疗方案能够不间断进行,并且减少降低化疗剂量的必要性。本研究的目的是系统地回顾文献,以便汇总评估抗氧化剂与化疗同时使用的随机试验结果。
检索了MEDLINE、Cochrane、CINAHL、AMED、AltHealthWatch和EMBASE数据库。最终统计仅纳入报告了生存率和/或肿瘤反应的随机对照临床试验。文献检索按照标准化方案进行了两次。由于符合纳入标准的试验中肿瘤类型和治疗方案存在异质性,因此未进行荟萃分析。
在845篇被考虑的文章中,19项试验符合纳入标准。所评估的抗氧化剂包括:谷胱甘肽(7项)、褪黑素(4项)、维生素A(2项)、一种抗氧化剂混合物(2项)、维生素C(1项)、N-乙酰半胱氨酸(1项)、维生素E(1项)和鞣花酸(1项)。大多数研究的受试者患有晚期或复发性疾病。
没有一项试验报告有证据表明化疗期间补充抗氧化剂会导致疗效显著降低。许多研究表明,补充抗氧化剂导致生存时间延长、肿瘤反应增加,或两者兼有,并且毒性比对照组少;然而,缺乏足够的统计效力是一个始终存在的局限性。有必要开展大规模、设计良好的关于抗氧化剂与化疗同时使用的研究。