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Symptom Clusters in Patients with Advanced Cancer: Cachexia, Anorexia & Asthenia  Davis Wilkins, M.D. M.A.-Bioethics  Fellow, Palliative Medicine  May 2008 Goals  Discuss impact of symptom clusters on QOL  Review pathophysiology & current thinking  Current treatment strategies  Ongoing research & future directions Definitions  Cachexia: involuntary profound loss of lean body mass and adipose tissue.  Anorexia: Loss of appetite  Asthenia/Fatigue: listlessness, decreased energy, decreased motivation; physical + cognitive components Impact of Anorexia & Cachexia  Occurs in up to 20% at dx; up to 80% in advanced cancer  Attributed as main cause of death in ~20% patients  Loss of >10% of premorbid weight = poor prognostic indicator & associated w/ decreased survival Strasser & Bruera, Hematol Oncol Clin N Am 2002 Anorexia & Cachexia, continued  More  common in solid tumors Exception: breast CA where fatigue more common  Does not correlate well w/ tumor size or biology  Specific complications of tumor location & treatments may additionally exacerbate  i.e. bowel obstruction & inflammation Strasser & Bruera, Hematol Oncol Clin N Am 2002 Impact of Asthenia/Fatigue  Asthenia/Fatigue has been ranked as the longest-lasting, most disruptive sx with the greatest impact on QOL    95% cancer patients endorse this as chief symptom: most common symptom Often lasts months or years after treatments Assessment difficult; multiple contributing factors • Cancer, treatment, complications of tx or ca, meds, other physical & psychological conditions Barnes & Bruera, Intl J Gynecol Cancer 2002 Additional impact of this sx cluster       Profound sense of loss associated with drastic changes in body image & ability to be active Often a cause in people’s withdrawal from social life Leads to increases stress around food/feeding by patient, family, friends Loss of functional status Decreased performance status = decreased treatment candidate All 3 symptoms also very common in other lifelimiting illnesses: AIDS, COPD, CHF, CKD, RA Importance of better recognition & treatment  More ‘silent’ symptoms than pain or dyspnea; often go unrecognized, unaddressed  No good current single therapies  Probably a common pathway for many diseases  Targeted therapies may do much to improve QOL, possibly even survival. Concept of symptom clusters  Definition: 3 or more symptoms that occur together, are stable, and relatively independent of other clusters  Anorexia, cachexia, fatigue: flu-like symptoms that manifest in cancer patients  Can also be accompanied by:      Somatic complaints/aches Depression Chronic nausea Early satiety Cognitve impairment Fan et al. Curr Oncol 2007; Gift, A. Seminar in Onc Nurs 2007 Current common treatments  Most single therapies often not very efficacious  Megesterol Marinol Mirtazepine Olanzapine SSRI’s  Exceptions:     • Corticosteroids, NSAIDs, ? methylphenidate Del Fabbro. JAMA 2007. It really IS all about cytokines…. Pathophysiology of cancer cachexia & anorexia  Complex metabolic syndrome/aberrant inflammatory response  Pro-inflammatory/catabolic state; peripheral proteins & lipids mobilized to keep up; decreased sensitivity to orexigenic compounds  Tumor by-products formed from proteolysis inducing factor (PIF), lipid mobilizing factor (LMF) & activation of ubiquitin-proteosome degradative pathway  Host cytokines: IL-1, IL-6, TNF-a, interferon  Host synthesis of acute phase proteins in liver at the expense of muscle protein, proteolysis, lipolysis, insulin resistance, decreased lipogenesis, elevated triglycerides, decreased HDlipoproteins  Neuroendocrine dysregulation & production of anorexigenic compounds Del Fabbro et al J Pall Med 2006 Cancer cachexia signaling pathways Clinical Cancer Research 13, 1356-1361, March 2007 ? Role of cytokine genetic polymorphisms  Cytokine production & polymorphisms recently implicated in severity of cancer related pain  Ongoing research into patient cytokine gene polymorphisms as explanation for pain variability in lung CA patients • Genes for TNF-alpha, IL-6, and IL-8 Reyes-Gibby et al. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. Dec 2007 Pathophysiology: cachexia & fatigue  CA patients have abnormal muscle, even when lean body mass = constant & caloric intake still normal:    Excessive lactate in tumor free muscles Animal studies show alterations in enzyme activity and isoenzyme distribution, as well as in synthesis & breakdown of myofibrils & sarcoplasmic proteins Patients w/ early impaired maximal strength Boddaert, M. et al Curr Opin Oncol 2006 Pathophysiology, continued  Nutritional supplements and appetite stimulation alone cannot overcome progressive loss of muscle mass.  Treatments (chemo, XRT, surgery) often exacerbate tissue damage as well as lead to deconditioning. Boddaert, M. et al Curr OpinOncol 2006 Current Pharmacologic Management: cachexia, anorexia  Goal: delay cachexia, alleviate symptom burden w/o changing body composition   Progestational agents • Megesterol • Corticosteroids Cannabinoids • Marinol, dronabinol   Hormonal/anti-catabolic • Testosterone,oxandrolone, GH Psychotropics • Antidepressants, anti-psychotics Strasser & Bruera Hematol Oncol Clin N Am 2002 Current Pharmacologic Management: Asthenia  Corticosteroids  Progestins  & androgens Megesterol, testosterone  Psychostimulants  Methylphenidate, modafenil, perroline  Cholinesterase  donepezil inhibitors Current Research  Immune Modulator therapies     Thalidomide Melatonin Progestins- in combination with other drugs Macronutrients • (L-carnitine, Omega 3 fatty acids, fish oil)  B-Agonists, Antagonists • Norepinephrine, clenbuterol  Anti-inflammatories  Corticosteroids, NSAIDS, EPA, macrolides Synergy?  May be synergistic if given with other therapies, due to targeting of multiple pathways simultaneously  Orexigens Corticosteroids, progestins  Anti-catabolics Oxandrolone, testosterone, GH  Anti-inflammatories NSAIDs, EPA, melatonin, macrolides Yennu, Del Fabbro & Bruera, AAHPM, 2008 Corticosteroids Mechanism unknown. ? Related to central euphoria in combination with influence on prostaglandin metabolism & cytokine release. Improve appetite, food intake, sense of well-being, performance status in advanced CA pts up to 4 weeks. NO significant weight gain.   Pred 10-40 mg/day; dex 1-8 mg bid Longer use may induce myopathy, infxn,GIB, leading to worsening asthenia Lundstrom (sweden)2005, Bruera 1995 Melatonin  Most potent endogenous anti-oxidant    Direct ROS scavenger & stimulates other anti-ox’s Has anti-tumor effects via multiple targets & may improve survival? Recent studies:    In many CA, melatonin production decreased Adding melatonin enhances PPI protective effects & perhaps decreases chemo side effects Improves multiple sx in solid tumor pts as well as decreases TNFa serum levels, pain levels from 7-10/102-4/10. • 20 mg/day x 4 weeks vs placebo, then crossover, then all (RCT) • (synthetic not cow) (IR not SR)  Downside: hard to assure quality of product/not FDA regulated. Need more trials/data. Plissoni (Italy) 2007; Del Fabbro AAHPM 2008 Thalidomide  In-vitro:     Modulate cytokines w/ CNS effects Recent studies:    Inhibits TNF-a, IL-6, IL-12 @ transcriptional level. Switches TH1->TH2 type cytokines; inhibits NFkB 100-300 mg/day significantly improves mult. Sxs Superior to Megace for improving appetite, modest decrease in wt. loss; side effect: + improved sleep Downside:    Narrow therapeutic window, Combo w/ decadron = early data suggest highly thrombogenic Unavailable in US except in CA Rx, research setting • Dirt cheap in rest of world, ($200/tablet here) Bruera, AAHPM, 2008 Modafenil (Provigil)     Novel wake-promoting agent  Increases release of monoamines, elevates histamine in certain brain regions.  Unlikely to have addiction potential  May have neuroprotective effects Well tolerated; less side effects than than psychostimulants Dosing: start at 50 mg qam; titrate to 100-200 mg/day. (400 mg/d for narcolepsy) Downside: HA, nausea, insomnia, anxiety ; new/experimental. $$  Assessment & Management of Cancer Related Anorexia, Cachexia Strasser & Bruera, Hematol Oncol Clin N Am 2002 Assessment & Management of Cancer Related Asthenia/Fatigue Algorithm for assessment and management of cancer-related fatigue From the NCCN 2002 cancer-related fatigue guideline, Supportive Care Practice Guidelines in Oncology Non-pharmacologic measures  Nutritional support, counseling   Meta-analysis of TPN in cancer patients showed decreased survival, increased susceptibility to infection; some patients may maintain weight w/ oral supplements for short time. Palliate other major contributing symptoms & reversible causes:  Chronic nausea, dyspnea, deconditioning, depression, mucositis, GI obstruction, anemia, dehydration, pain, metabolic derangements Nonpharmacologic measures, continued  Increase activity as able • Benefit of resistance and endurance training on improved mood, quality of sleep, muscle mass maintenance   Stress management, supportive counseling Reframe family/pt. understanding • Not: ‘starving to death’ but complex metabolic abnormalities caused by the cancer • Giving additional food will not result in additional fat or muscle restoration • Best chance may be to try and treat with multiple meds, but need to weigh risk-benefit, pt. ability/desire to take pills Current novel research         Targeted therapies  Proteasome inhibitors  TNF inhibitors  Monoclonal antibodies to IL-6 Anabolic cytokines (IL-15) Specific cannabinoid-receptor antagonists Role of Grehlin (‘gut-brain’ hormone) , leptin Alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone Growth Hormone/IGF/IGF-I treatments Immunonutrition  (omega 3 EFA, L-arginine, L-carnitine glutamine, nucleotides) Anti-cytokine approaches  Anti-sense NFkappa-B  Soluble TNF-alpha receptors  Cytokine antagonists (pentoxifylline, bradykinin antagonists) Strasser & Bruera Hematol Oncol Clin N Am 2002 Further research needed  Need     trials with patient-centered endpoints ?Does weight gain/increased lean body mass lead to better survival? Function? QOL? Improved chemo/XRT tolerance? Bibliography Barnes, EA & Bruera, E. “Fatigue in patients with advanced cancer: A review.” Intl Jour Gynecol Cancer Sept 2002; 12(5), 424-28. Boddaert et al.” On our way to targeted therapy for cachexia in cancer?” Curr Opin Oncolo 2006 18:335-340. Del Fabbro. “Cachexia & Wasting: A Modern Approach.” JAMA Feb 7,2007 297(5)536— 7. Del Fabbro et al. “ Symptom Control in Palliative Care—Part II: Cachexia, Anorexia, and Fatigue.” Journal of Palliative Medicine 2006 9 (2); 409-421. Fan, G, et al. “Symptom Clusters in Cancer Patients: A review of the literature.” Curr Oncol. October 2007; 14(5)173-179. Gift, A. Symptom Clusters Related to Specific Cancers.” Seminars in Onc Nursing, May 2007, 23(2): 136-141 Morrow et al. Management of Cancer-Related Fatigue. Cancer Investigation, 2005, 23:229-239 Reyes-Gibby et al. “Cytokine genes and pain severity in lung CA; exploring the influence..”Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2007 Dec; 16(12)2745-51. Strasser F, & Bruera, E. “ Update on Anorexia & Cachexia” Hematol Oncol Clin N AM 2002 (16) 589-617. Swarnali, A, & Guttridge, D. “Cancer Cachexia Signaling Pathways Continue to Emerge Yet Much Still Points to the Proteasome” Clinical Cancer Research 13, 1356-1361, March 2007 Yennurajalingam S, and Bruera E. “Palliative management of fatigue at the close of life: “It feels like my body is all worn out!” JAMA 2007; 297 (3): 295-304