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The purpose of this study is to learn the effects of fasting on cancer cells while you get maintenance treatment.
Full description
Cancer cells use an increased supply of glucose to make energy and do not have protection against fasting that normal cells do. Because of this, researchers would like to study how fasting may help chemotherapy target cancer cells instead of normal cells. Initial studies suggest that fasting may decrease the side effects of chemotherapy and increase the chances of your cancer responding to the chemotherapy. Patient populations will have non-small cell lung cancer in which chemo-immunotherapy with carboplatin/pemetrexed and pembrolizumab have been recommended to treat the cancer as part of standard care.
Primary Objective 1. To determine the feasibility and compliance of administering a fasting-mimicking diet (FMD) in patients with advanced NSCLC receiving maintenance therapy
Secondary Objectives
Correlative Objectives
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Self-reported weight loss of > 10% in the 6 weeks prior to study entry
History of diabetes mellitus or patients with a known recent elevated A1c > 6
History of symptomatic hypoglycemia
Prior therapies with inhibitors of IGF-1 such as
Concurrent use of somatostatin
Concurrent use of immunosuppressive medications including sirolimus, tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil, azathioprine, prednisone, dexamethasone, or cyclosporine
Significant food allergies (screening checklist in Appendix 3) which would make the subject unable to consume the food provided
History or current evidence of any medical or psychiatric condition, therapy that may confound the results of the trial, interfere with the subject's participation for the full duration of the trial, or is not in the best interest of the participating subject as deemed by the treating investigator.
Pregnant or lactating females are not eligible.
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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12 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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