Abstract

Modified ketogenic diet in solid tumors: A Veteran Affairs Pittsburgh Healthcare System case series.

Author
person Jocelyn Lai Tan Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA info_outline Jocelyn Lai Tan, Jennifer Carrick, Vida Almario Passero, Jenna Shields, Andrew Dede Liman, Hema Rai, Lauri Harrold
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Authors person Jocelyn Lai Tan Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA info_outline Jocelyn Lai Tan, Jennifer Carrick, Vida Almario Passero, Jenna Shields, Andrew Dede Liman, Hema Rai, Lauri Harrold Organizations Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA, Pittsburgh VA Healthcare System, Pittsburgh, PA, VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System, Pittsburgh, PA, VAMC, Pittsburgh, PA Abstract Disclosures Research Funding Other Background: Cancers prefer glucose due to mitochondrial dysfunction. Ketogenic diets fuel normal cells while starving cancer. Sparse data exists on ketogenic diets in solid tumors. Methods: Studied 5 advanced solid tumor patients on a modified ketogenic diet plus standard of care chemotherapy. Daily carbohydrate limited to 20-40 grams, no sweets or starch. Histories and clinical courses are presented. Results: Case 1: 70 year old male, medically inoperable Stage IIIA poorly differentiated squamous cell lung cancer and non-hodgkins lymphoma. Treated with radiation and paclitaxel/carboplatin. After 5 months, lung cancer relapsed in a neck mass, treated with chemoradiation plus the diet. At 46 months, scans and blood counts were normal. Case 2: 42 year old, 417 lb. male diabetic stage IV colon cancer, spread to lungs and liver. Progressed on 5FU/bevacizumab/oxaliplatin, irinotecan, tipiracil/trifluridine, regorafenib but responded to 5FU/irinotecan rechallenge plus liver chemoembolization. Dieted, mild ketosis but lost 64 lbs, stable disease at 6.5 years. Case 3: 42 year old male, Stage III BRAF V600 E melanoma, Vemurafenib intolerant. Bulky axillary nodes resected plus diet for 3 years. Complete remission at 7 yrs 9 months. Case 4: 57 year old male, medically inoperable liver cancer, normal AFP values and normal scans after 5 months of sorafenib. AFP later increased to 690 ng/ml. Advised to change treatment but he refused and started the ketogenic diet with the sorafenib. After 5 months, AFP improved to 445 ng/ml. Sorafenib and diet interrupted for 3 months, AFP rose to 1017. At 7 yrs, 4 months, back on sorafenib and diet, AFP 1520 mg/ml, negative scans. Case 5: 49 year old male, aggressive digital papillary skin adenocarcinoma, multi-organ metastases. Had side-effects with many chemotherapies (paclitaxel/bevacizumab/carboplatin, sorafenib, gemcitabine, oxaliplatin/5FU, cyclophosphamide) Stable disease on diet despite multiple therapy changes. At 34 months, he was off the diet, tumors grew plus new brain lesions (resected). Alive on atezolizumab at 36 months. Conclusions: Ketogenic diets in human solid tumors seem well tolerated and may improve response and survival after standard therapy.