4.5 Article

Fasting Intervention for Children With Unilateral Renal Tumors to Reduce Toxicity

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PEDIATRICS
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fped.2022.828615

Keywords

acute kidney injury; short-term fasting; renal tumor surgery; wilms tumor; toxicity

Categories

Funding

  1. ONCODE (Dutch Cancer Society)
  2. European Research Council
  3. NIH [PO1 AG017242]
  4. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [73111208 - SFB 829]
  5. ADPS Longevity Research Award
  6. Regiodeal Foodvalley
  7. BBoL (NWO-ENW)
  8. ZonMW Memorabel [733050810]
  9. EJP-RD [TC-NER RD20-113]

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Childhood renal tumors, particularly Wilms tumor, account for a significant proportion of childhood cancers. Short-term fasting (STF) has the potential to mitigate the risk of acute kidney injury (AKI) associated with renal surgery and improve renal function recovery in children. This study aims to investigate the effect of STF on postoperative renal function recovery in children with unilateral renal tumors.
Childhood renal tumors account for around 6% of all childhood cancers and 90% of these cases are Wilms tumor. In Europe, the SIOP-RTSG approach is considered standard of care and has resulted in five-year survival rates of over 90%. Efforts to decrease toxicity are now being pursued. Short-term fasting (STF), a short but strong reduction in calorie-intake, is associated with improved fitness, enhanced coping with acute physical stress and a lower risk of age-associated diseases. STF temporarily reduces growth to boost resilience, maintenance, and defense-mechanisms, by which toxic side-effects of (oxidative) damage and inflammation are largely prevented. Renal surgery for Wilms tumor carries a risk of acute kidney injury (AKI) and pediatric patients that had an episode of AKI are at increased risk for developing chronic renal disease. STF could mitigate surgery-induced stress and could further improve outcomes. We aim to investigate the effect of STF on renal function recovery after renal tumor surgery by conducting a single-center, prospective, randomized, non-blinded, intervention study. Children diagnosed with a unilateral renal tumor and opting for curative treatment are eligible for inclusion. The main study objective is to investigate the potential decrease in occurrence of AKI due to STF. Secondary objectives include renal function recovery, child's wellbeing, physical functioning, and feasibility of and adherence to STF in children with cancer.

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