Intermittent Fasting Accompanying Chemotherapy in Gynecological Cancers
- Conditions
- Ovarian CancerBreast Cancer
- Interventions
- Other: FastingOther: Vegan
- Registration Number
- NCT03162289
- Lead Sponsor
- Charite University, Berlin, Germany
- Brief Summary
The aim of this trial is an evaluation of the effectiveness of intermittent fasting as a supplementary therapy in patients with breast cancer and ovarian cancer in respect to quality of life, reduction of side effects and possible reduction in tumor progression.
- Detailed Description
Chemotherapy (CT) is a basic element in the therapy of gynecological oncologic diseases besides surgery, antibody therapy, anti-hormonal therapy and radiation. The chemotherapeutic intervention can be experienced physically and psychologically as a severe stress due to unwanted acute and also relevant long term side effects. It is even possible that because of severe side effects the CT can not be continued and main goals of the therapy like tumor reduction or elimination can not be achieved. Except of some medicinal approaches (such as antiemetics) or therapeutic exercise, not many therapeutic approaches are known to help reduce CT induced side effects. Against this background it is important to identify and scientifically evaluate new approaches to reduce the side effects of CT. The aim of this study is to verify the effectiveness of intermittent fasting as a potentially helpful supportive therapy in CT. In a prior pilot study of our institute with 34 breast- and ovarian cancer patients showed beneficial effects of an intermittent fasting of 72-84 h parallel to the application of the CT (manuscript submitted in Cancer Science).
The results of this confirmatory study are therefore of potentially high clinical relevance for all chemotherapeutically treated patients.
Long term goal: This study can lead to the improvement of tolerance and effectiveness of chemotherapeutic tumor therapy through accompanying intense nutritional therapy interventions. Beyond that it can be the starting point of a following multi-center randomized controlled study.
A large variety of animal experimental studies as well as three smaller pilot studies suggest that intermittent fasting can reduce the unwanted side effects of CT and enhance the quality of life. It is being speculated that the anti-tumor effect of fasting is enhanced through the reduction of the Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) and mTOR as well as p53-signalling molecules (differential stress resistance).
But it is still unclear whether the possible beneficial effect that intermittent fasting shows can only be reached by subtotal caloric restriction or a significant reduction of the intake of animal proteins and refined sugar could also cause a similar decrease in IGF-1.
Against this background this confirmatory study aims to test the hypothesis that CT in the adjuvant and neoadjuvant treatment of breast- and ovarian cancer is better tolerable under intermittent fasting than under a normo-caloric vegan and sugar-reduced diet.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
- Sex
- Female
- Target Recruitment
- 150
Not provided
- Reduction in CT dose compared to usual dosage
- Excessive underweight (BMI <19kg / m2) or actual weight reduction > 3kg or > 5kg in the last 1 or 3 months.
- Pre-existing eating disorder (Anorexia nervosa, Bulimia)
- Renal insufficiency (creatinine> 2mg / dl)
- Severe disease or other disease with a significant reduction in mobility and overall vitality
- Diabetes mellitus
- No inclusion in other study protocol
- Lack of email address and Internet access (due to electronic CRF)
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Fasting Fasting 60-72 h-modified fasting (36-48 h before and 24 h after chemotherapy) Vegan Vegan 60-72 h-vegan diet (36-48 h before and 24 h after chemotherapy)
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method FACT-G Date of inclusion (baseline), day -2 and +7 at each chemotherapy (CT) in triweekly cycles/-2 days at each CT in weekly cycles and +7 after the last weekly CT, 4 months after inclusion, 3 weeks after end of CT and 1, 2 and 3 years after inclusion Summarized change of FACT-G score
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Complete remissions From date of randomization until the date of surgery Number of histologically proven complete remissions (ypT0ypN0 bzw. ypT0/is) after neoadjuvant CT
Millar Payne classification after surgery/histological examination, an average 6 months after intervention start Histological classification according to Millar Payne scale
Trial Locations
- Locations (8)
Ernst-von-Bergmann Klinikum, Klinik für Gynäkologie und Geburtshilfe
🇩🇪Potsdam, Brandenburg, Germany
Charité Hochschulambulanz für Naturheilkunde am Immanuel Krankenhaus
🇩🇪Berlin, Germany
Brustzentrum Charite Campus Mitte
🇩🇪Berlin, Germany
Vivantes Brustzentrum
🇩🇪Berlin, Germany
Klinikum Ludwigsburg
🇩🇪Ludwigsburg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Charité Virchow Klinikum
🇩🇪Berlin, Germany
Albert-Ludwigs-University of Freiburg
🇩🇪Freiburg im Breisgau, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Brustzentrum Krankenhaus Waldfriede
🇩🇪Berlin, Germany