Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Campus Bio-Medico, University of Rome, Rome, Italy,
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Campus Bio-Medico, University of Rome, Rome, Italy.
Chemotherapy. 2020;65(3-4):77-84. doi: 10.1159/000510839. Epub 2020 Nov 16.
Diet may influence various aspects of human health. In fact, it is well known that diet can favour or not the development of various human pathologies, like diabetes, hypertension, and hypercholesterolaemia. Interestingly, diet has an influence in cancer development too (e.g., this relation has been studied for pancreatic, colonic, gastric, and breast cancers). Between the mechanisms that could explain this relation, there is epigenetic. In fact, thanks to epigenetic reprogramming, certain substances introduced with diet could affect gene expression, especially of those genes involved in cells' proliferation and growth. In recent years, some studies have been published about the role that diet could have on chemotherapy outcome. Especially, various studies have analysed the effects of fasting and ketogenic diet (KD) during chemotherapy. The aim of this study is to summarize scientific evidences about diet and its effects on chemotherapy on humans and to better understand if these approaches deserve to be further investigated and might be suitable and beneficial during cancer treatment.
We performed an electronic literature search of the PubMed database, using the combination of following terms: "fasting" or "ketogenic" with "chemotherapy," "cancer treatment." We included studies on humans about fasting and KD during chemotherapy, excluding reviews, case series including <10 patients, studies conducted on animals or limited to radiotherapy treatment, and studies that were mostly about molecular mechanisms. Results/Discussion In our analysis we included 4 studies (1 randomized controlled trial, 1 retrospective study, and 2 prospective pilot studies) about KD and 4 studies (1 prospective cohort study, 1 case series report, and 2 randomized trials) about fasting during oncological treatments. Authors suggested an improvement of quality of life (QoL) and fatigue in patients under chemotherapy, especially in the 8 days after chemotherapy treatment. We found that both fasting and KD demonstrated to be tolerable and feasible during oncological treatments. Conversely, data about survival outcomes are still controversial, but it should be underlined that it was not the outcome of these preliminary studies.
All comparatives studies have demonstrated that even fasting then KD results in a reduction of collateral effects of adjuvant chemotherapy (due to reduction of drugs toxicity) and a better QoL than in patients that follow no diet. Unfortunately, despite the fact that various laboratory and animal studies confirm advantages from KD and fasting, few data are today disposable on humans: further studies are needed to confirm data exposed in this review.
饮食可能会影响人类健康的各个方面。事实上,众所周知,饮食可以促进或不促进各种人类疾病的发展,如糖尿病、高血压和高胆固醇血症。有趣的是,饮食对癌症的发展也有影响(例如,这种关系已经在胰腺癌、结肠癌、胃癌和乳腺癌中进行了研究)。在可以解释这种关系的机制中,有一种是表观遗传的。事实上,由于表观遗传重编程,某些饮食中引入的物质可能会影响基因表达,尤其是那些与细胞增殖和生长有关的基因。近年来,发表了一些关于饮食对化疗结果影响的研究。特别是,许多研究分析了化疗期间禁食和生酮饮食(KD)的作用。本研究的目的是总结饮食及其对人类化疗影响的科学证据,并更好地了解这些方法是否值得进一步研究,以及在癌症治疗期间是否合适和有益。
我们在 PubMed 数据库中进行了电子文献检索,使用了以下组合术语:“禁食”或“生酮”与“化疗”、“癌症治疗”。我们纳入了关于化疗期间禁食和 KD 的人类研究,排除了综述、包括<10 例患者的病例系列研究、主要关于分子机制的动物研究或仅限于放射治疗的研究。结果/讨论在我们的分析中,我们纳入了 4 项关于 KD 的研究(1 项随机对照试验、1 项回顾性研究和 2 项前瞻性试点研究)和 4 项关于化疗期间禁食的研究(1 项前瞻性队列研究、1 项病例系列报告和 2 项随机试验)。作者提出,化疗患者的生活质量(QoL)和疲劳得到改善,尤其是在化疗治疗后 8 天。我们发现,禁食和 KD 在肿瘤治疗过程中均耐受且可行。相反,关于生存结果的数据仍然存在争议,但应该强调的是,这不是这些初步研究的结果。
所有比较研究都表明,即使是禁食然后 KD 也会导致辅助化疗的副作用减少(由于减少了药物毒性),并且比不遵循饮食的患者的生活质量更好。不幸的是,尽管各种实验室和动物研究证实了 KD 和禁食的优势,但目前人类可用的数据很少:需要进一步的研究来证实本综述中提出的数据。