4.7 Article

A Supplemented High-Fat Low-Carbohydrate Diet for the Treatment of Glioblastoma

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CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
卷 22, 期 10, 页码 2482-2495

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AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-15-0916

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  1. McKnight Brain Institute, Department of Neurosurgery
  2. Florida Center for Brain Tumor Research
  3. National Brain Tumor Society
  4. NIH - NINDS [R24 NS086554-01]
  5. NIH/NCI [R21 CA141020-01]
  6. American Cancer Society Chris DiMarco Institutional Research Grant

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Purpose: Dysregulated energetics coupled with uncontrolled proliferation has become a hallmark of cancer, leading to increased interest in metabolic therapies. Glioblastoma (GB) is highly malignant, very metabolically active, and typically resistant to current therapies. Dietary treatment options based on glucose deprivation have been explored using a restrictive ketogenic diet (KD), with positive anticancer reports. However, negative side effects and a lack of palatability make the KD difficult to implement in an adult population. Hence, we developed a less stringent, supplemented high-fat low-carbohydrate (sHFLC) diet that mimics the metabolic and antitumor effects of the KD, maintains a stable nutritional profile, and presents an alternative clinical option for diverse patient populations. Experimental Design: The dietary paradigm was tested in vitro and in vivo, utilizing multiple patient-derived gliomasphere lines. Cellular proliferation, clonogenic frequency, and tumor stem cell population effects were determined in vitro using the neurosphere assay (NSA). Antitumor efficacy was tested in vivo in preclinical xenograft models and mechanistic regulation via the mTOR pathway was explored. Results: Reducing glucose in vitro to physiologic levels, coupled with ketone supplementation, inhibits proliferation of GB cells and reduces tumor stem cell expansion. In vivo, while maintaining animal health, the sHFLC diet significantly reduces the growth of tumor cells in a subcutaneous model of tumor progression and increases survival in an orthotopic xenograft model. Dietarymediated anticancer effects correlate with the reduction of mTOR effector expression. Conclusions: We demonstrate that the sHFLC diet is a viable treatment alternative to the KD, and should be considered for clinical testing. (C) 2015 AACR.

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