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Plasma Levels of Glucagon-like Peptide-2 and Dyspepsia in Patients With Extraintestinal Cancer During Chemotherapy

A

Azienda Ospedaliera Specializzata in Gastroenterologia Saverio de Bellis

Status

Completed

Conditions

Breast Cancer
Dyspepsia
Lung Cancer

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The specific aim of the study is to investigate the relationship between the development of dyspepsia and GI dyspeptic symptoms in relation to circulating levels of peculiar GI peptides (such gastrin, pepsinogen and GLP-2) in patients with non-gastrointestinal neoplasm well controlled for emesis.

Full description

The complications of anticancer treatment threaten the effectiveness of therapy because they lead to dose reduction, increase healthcare costs, and impair patients' quality of life. Gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms are the most frequent side effects of antineoplastic chemotherapy behind bone-marrow depression, with nausea and vomiting representing the mainly referred ones.

Gastrointestinal (GI) mucositis, which represents injury of the rest of the alimentary tract beyond oral mucositis, is becoming recognized increasingly as a toxicity associated with many standard-dose chemotherapy regimens. Although clinicians consider them "minor complaints", many patients (40-100%) treated with chemotherapy and/or exposed to ionizing radiation suffer from such a disease. After chemotherapy, GI mucositis is most prominent in the small intestine, but it also occurs in the esophagus, stomach, and large intestine. The GI symptoms related to mucositis mimic those from other GI disease (such as dyspepsia, reflux disease or abdominal pain and diarrhea). Alimentary tract mucositis increases morbility and mortality and contribute to rising health care cost.

The comprehension of pathophysiology will shed light on the rationale for targeting specific pathways and so for the use of specific agents for prevention and treatment. Since the role of chemotherapy in the onset of GI motility disorders in addition to minor GI complaints has not been clarified yet. Understanding the pathophysiology of mucositis, its measures and scores, are essential for progress in research and care direct at this common side-effect of anticancer therapy. Currently, there is not strong evidence to support a recommendation for and against the use of certain agents (mucosal surface protectants, antiinflammatory or antimicrobial agents, growth factors, etc).

Enrollment

70 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients with newly diagnosed cancer (lung and breast cancer),
  • Patients currently free of active disease

Exclusion criteria

  • History of cerebral edema, primary and secondary brain neoplasm with signs and symptoms of raised intracranial pressure and/or brain metastases,
  • Signs of marked hepatic or renal dysfunction, cardiac failure
  • Signs of dyspepsia, peptic ulcer, gastric surgery or prior diagnosis of other cancer
  • Administration of drugs interfering with GI motility (i.e. antisecretory, prokinetic, or antibiotic drugs) as well as the exposition to radiotherapy, four weeks prior to the examination
  • Referred episode of nausea of any severity within 24 h prior to antiemetic therapy, if they had experienced vomiting in the previous 24 h,
  • Pregnancy or lactating
  • Concomitant administration of agents known to have significant antiemetic activity, including benzodiazepines and other corticosteroids

Trial design

70 participants in 1 patient group

GLP-2 and symptom evaluation
Description:
Before starting and at the end of the chemotherapy, along with a blood withdrawal for GLP-2 evaluation, a GSRS (gastrointestinal symptom rate scale) questionnaire will be filled by each patient to account for GI symptoms. In addition, minor complaints such as warm sensation after chemotherapy, susceptibility to nausea under specific condition, sweating and weakness will scored by visual analog score (VAS). Lastly, the NCI-CTC score for mucositis will be performed.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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