Fish Oil Helps Some Cancer
Patients with Wasting
Loss of weight and muscle mass, common
among people with cancer, may be improved with fish oil supplements,
according to a new report.
Intestinal upsets make high-dose
fish oil capsules difficult for many people with cancer-related
wasting to tolerate, but those who are able to take the supplements
regularly may be able to stabilize their weight or even gain pounds,
according to Dr. C. Patrick Burns of the University of Iowa Carver
College of Medicine in Iowa City and colleagues.
Animal studies and some clinical
investigations have suggested omega-3 fatty acids found in fish
oils may protect against cachexia, as weight loss related to a
chronic disease is called. There are three mechanisms by which
omega-3s may have this effect, Burns noted in an interview with
Reuters Health.
Omega-3s inhibit secretion of inflammatory
compounds. Tumors may promote cachexia by releasing factors that
stimulate production of these substances, he explained, so the
fatty acids would block this process. Also, he added, omega-3
fatty acids may slow protein degradation and fat breakdown.
In the current study, in the medical
journal Cancer, 43 patients with moderate to severe malnutrition
were prescribed high doses of omega-3 fatty acid supplements.
The dose depended the individual's weight. For example, a person
weighing 70 kilograms (about 150 pounds) would take eleven 1-gram
capsules per day.
The capsules were divided into
two doses, taken with breakfast and lunch. The researchers began
the study with twice the dosage, but reduced it because many patients
were unwilling or unable to take so many capsules.
Among the 36 participants who took
at least some capsules, six were able to gain more than 5 percent
of their body weight or achieve their normal weight. Twenty-four
other patients stabilized their weight, meaning they gained or
lost no more than 5 percent. Six other patients lost more than
5 percent of their body weight.
Side effects were common, and included
nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, and the size of the capsules made
them difficult for some patients to take.
Nineteen patients stopped treatment
early due to side effects, but some other participants tolerated
the regimen with few problems, the researchers note.
"It did not seem that gender, age,
or ethnicity predicted intolerance, but the study was not powered
to test that question," Burns told Reuters Health.
Future studies of fish oil for
cachexia that begin when patients are less severely ill, and last
for longer than 30 days, may have more positive results, the researchers
conclude.
SOURCE: Cancer, July 15, 2004.
Reference
Source 89
August 9, 2004
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