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Is there a role for melatonin in supportive care?
Lissoni P.
U.O. di Oncologia Medica e Radioterapia, Ospedale S. Gerardo dei Tintori,
20052 Monza (MI), Italy,
oncologia@genie.it or p.lissoni@hsgerardo.org
Abstract. Melatonin (MLT) is the main hormone released from the pineal
gland and has proved to have physiological antitumor activity. MLT has been
shown to exert anticancer activity through several biological mechanisms:
antiproliferative action, stimulation of anticancer immunity,
modulation of
oncogene expression, and anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant and
anti-angiogenic effects.
Several experimental studies have shown that MLT
may inhibit cancer cell growth, and preliminary clinical studies seem to
confirm its anticancer property in humans. In addition, MLT may have other
biological effects, which could be useful in the palliative therapy of
cancer, namely anticachectic, anti-asthenic and thrombopoietic activities.
On this basis, the present clinical investigation was performed in an
attempt at better definition of the therapeutic properties of MLT in human
neoplasms.
In a first clinical study, we evaluated the effects of MLT in a
group of 1,440 patients with untreatable advanced solid tumors, who
received supportive care alone or supportive care plus MLT.
In a second
study, we evaluated the influence of MLT on the efficacy and toxicity of
chemotherapy in a group of 200 metastatic patients with
chemotherapy-resistant tumor histotype, who were randomized to receive
chemotherapy alone or chemotherapy plus MLT.
In both studies, MLT was given
orally at 20 mg/day during the dark period of the day. The frequency of
cachexia, asthenia, thrombocytopenia and lymphocytopenia was significantly
lower in patients treated with MLT than in those who received supportive
care alone.
Moreover, the percentage of patients with disease stabilization
and the percentage 1-year survival were both significantly higher in
patients concomitantly treated with MLT than in those treated with
supportive care alone.
The objective tumor response rate was significantly
higher in patients treated with chemotherapy plus MLT than in those treated
with chemotherapy alone.
Moreover, MLT induced a significant decline in the
frequency of chemotherapy-induced asthenia, thrombocytopenia, stomatitis,
cardiotoxicity and neurotoxicity.
These clinical results demonstrate that
the pineal hormone MLT may be successfully administered in medical oncology
in the supportive care of untreatable advanced cancer patients and for the
prevention of chemotherapy-induced toxicity.
Support Care Cancer 2002 Mar;10(2):110-116
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