Table 2.
Authors | Cancer-Related Complication | Species | Cancer Type | Treatment Scheme | Major Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hanai et al., 2018 [103] | Cachexia-anorexia syndrome | Human | Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | Prosure® (1056 mg EPA) | No significant difference among experimental groups |
Persson et al., 2005 [104] | Cachexia-anorexia syndrome | Human | Advanced gastrointestinal cancer | 30 mL/d 1 FO (4.9g EPA + 3.2 g DHA) | FO stabilized weight in 27% patients |
Shirai et al., 2017 [105] | Cachexia-anorexia syndrome | Human | Advanced gastrointestinal cancer | Prosure® (1.1 g EPA + 0.5 g DHA) | Increase of body weight and lean body mass (p = 0.002/p < 0.001) |
Werner et al., 2017 [119] | Cachexia-anorexia syndrome | Human | Pancreatic cancer | 6.9 g EPA/13.6 g DHA in 100 g or 8.5 g EPA/ 12.3 g DHA in 100g | No significant differences between omega-3 PUFA treatments |
Solis-Martínez et al., 2018 [110] | Cachexia-anorexia syndrome | Human | Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | 2 g EPA | Weight and 2 LBM maintenance |
Hajjaji et al., 2012 [117] | Chemotherapy-induced cachexia | Rat | Chemically-induced tumor + doxorubicin treatment | DHA-enriched diet (80 g/kg diet) | DHA diet avoided weight loss |
Schissel et al., 2015 [118] | Cancer-associated cachexia | Rat | Breast carcinoma (Walker 256 cell line) | 53.6% EPA + DHA or 54.4% ALA | ALA and EPA improved weight gain (cachectic vs. cachectic + omega-3 p < 0.05) |
Du et al., 2015 [115] | Cancer-related cachexia | Mice | Sarcoma (S180 cell line) | 42% EPA + 6.8% DHA | Decreased lipolysis and increased body weight (p < 0.001) |
Penna et al., 2011 [116] | Cancer-related cachexia | Mice | Lewis lung carcinoma | EPA (0.5 g/kg) or EPA (0.5 g/kg) + exercise | EPA + exercise significantly improved muscle weight (p < 0.05) |
Muzio et al., 2016 [120] | Cachexia in vitro model | Human | Lung adenocarcinoma | 50 µM EPA + DHA | Myoblast formation |
1 FO: Fish oil; 2 LBM: lean body mass.