BC Team Sees Alternative Brain Cancer Therapy
High fat, low carb diet approach 'safe and effective'
By Greg Frost
Staff Writer
Boston College biologists have identified an alternative,
diet-based method of treating brain cancer that does
not involve administering toxic chemicals, radiation
or invasive surgery.
The biologists found that KetoCal, a commercially available
high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet designed to treat epilepsy
in children, can significantly decrease the growth
of brain tumors in laboratory mice. Moreover, the diet
significantly enhanced health and survival rates relative
to mice in control groups who consumed a standard low-fat,
high-carbohydrate diet.
The findings were based on a study published last week
in the online journal Nutrition & Metabolism.
"KetoCal represents a novel alternative therapy
for malignant brain cancer," said Prof. Thomas
Seyfried (Biology), who conceived and supervised the
study. "While the tumors did not vanish in the
mice who received the strict KetoCal diet, they got
significantly smaller and the animals lived significantly
longer. And compared to radiation, chemotherapy and
surgery, KetoCal is a relatively inexpensive treatment
option."
Malignant brain cancer is one of the most lethal types
of cancer in adults and is the second leading cause
of cancer death in children. Many current ways of treating
the disease fail to provide long-term management because
they ineffectively target tumor cells and harm the
health and vitality of normal brain cells.
The KetoCal diet gets around this dilemma by essentially
starving the brain tumor cells of the sugary molecules
on which they rely for growth and survival. Because
of its special composition, the diet deprives the tumor
cells of the glucose they need; at the same time, the
diet provides normal brain cells with ketones, a class
of organic compounds they can metabolize effectively
but the tumor cells cannot.
In their experiment, the BC team surgically implanted
two different kinds of tumors into the brains of male
mice. The mice were then divided into three groups.
One group was fed a high-carbohydrate mouse chow, one
was given unlimited amounts of KetoCal, and the final
group was given KetoCal in a restricted dosage.
The researchers found that in the mice on the restricted
diet, KetoCal decreased the growth of brain tumors
by between 35 percent and 65 percent. Moreover, survival
rates were higher in the mice on the restricted diet.
"This preclinical study indicates that KetoCal
is a safe and effective diet therapy and should be
considered as an alternative therapeutic option for
malignant brain cancer," the researchers wrote.
KetoCal is manufactured by Nutricia North America. The
study authors report they have no financial interests
in the company, although it did provide the KetoCal
used in the experiments as a gift.
The journal article's lead author is Weihua Zhou, a
research technician in the Biology Department. Co-authors
include Seyfried, Purna Mukherjee, Michael Kiebish,
William Markis and John Mantis.
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