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The purpose of this study is to determine whether fish oils - a known source of omega-3 given intravenously (via a 'drip') will help cure secondary deposits in the liver from bowel cancer.
Full description
Fish oils have many proven benefits for a wide range of clinical arenas such as ischaemic heart disease, rheumatoid arthritis and inflammatory bowel disease.
Recent research has described the beneficial effects of intravenous fish oils for surgical patients, such as reduced hospital stay, reduced re-operation rate and reduced requirements for intravenous antibiotics. These are in part due to the anti-inflammatory effects of fish oils.
There is evidence that fish oils are also effective against cancer, large population studies indicate that diets rich in omega-3 are associated with a lower incidence of cancer, and in vitro and animal studies demonstrate anti-tumour effects of fish oils
This study aims to assess the effect of omega-3 FA upon hepatic colorectal metastases in a pilot study. 20 patients will be selected for this pilot study with potentially resectable hepatic colorectal adenocarcinoma metastases. 10 patients will receive total parenteral nutrition (TPN) without fish oils (controls), 10 will receive fish oil containing lipid emulsion in their TPN.
Changes in tumour angiogenesis (increased angiogenesis is associated with a poorer prognosis in hepatic colorectal metastases) will be investigated using digital contrast enhanced MRI scanning, and markers of angiogenesis will be investigated in blood and resected tumour samples from the patients.
It is a randomised controlled double blind trial.
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20 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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