The Role of Ketogenic Diet in the Treatment of Neuroblastoma.
Rangarirai MakukuZeinab Sinaei FarNeda KhaliliAlistar MoyoSepideh RaziMahsa Keshavarz-FathiMaryam MahmoudiNima RezaeiPublished in: Integrative cancer therapies (2023)
The ketogenic diet (KD) was initially used in 1920 for drug-resistant epileptic patients. From this point onward, ketogenic diets became a pivotal part of nutritional therapy research. To date, KD has shown therapeutic potential in many pathologies such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, autism, brain cancers, and multiple sclerosis. Although KD is now an adjuvant therapy for certain diseases, its effectiveness as an antitumor nutritional therapy is still an ongoing debate, especially in Neuroblastoma. Neuroblastoma is the most common extra-cranial solid tumor in children and is metastatic at initial presentation in more than half of the cases. Although Neuroblastoma can be managed by surgery, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and radiotherapy, its 5-year survival rate in children remains below 40%. Earlier studies have proposed the ketogenic diet as a possible adjuvant therapy for patients undergoing treatment for Neuroblastoma. In this study, we seek to review the possible roles of KD in the treatment of Neuroblastoma.
Keyphrases
- drug resistant
- multiple sclerosis
- early stage
- patients undergoing
- weight loss
- physical activity
- squamous cell carcinoma
- young adults
- end stage renal disease
- randomized controlled trial
- multidrug resistant
- acinetobacter baumannii
- systematic review
- minimally invasive
- chronic kidney disease
- autism spectrum disorder
- stem cells
- coronary artery disease
- resting state
- blood brain barrier
- acute coronary syndrome
- cystic fibrosis
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- cell therapy
- replacement therapy
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- functional connectivity
- cognitive decline
- cerebral ischemia
- childhood cancer