Ketogenic Metabolic Therapy for Glioma
Document Type
Article
Abstract
PURPOSE: This study describes a retrospective case series of patients with glioma who received ketogenic metabolic therapy through dietary adherence and intermittent fasting. METHODS: A retrospective chart review of a single surgeon's clinic records was performed to identify patients who maintained nutritional ketosis for at least four months between January 2015 and October 2020. RESULTS: Sixteen patients who met the inclusion criteria constituted a heterogeneous population of patients with diagnoses including eight World Health Organization (WHO) grade IV gliomas (seven glioblastoma, one gliosarcoma), seven WHO grade III gliomas (three oligodendroglioma, four astrocytoma), and one WHO grade II oligodendroglioma. IDH1 mutation status was present for 12 patients, and MGMT methylation status was present for eight patients. The mean (standard deviation [SD]) duration of ketogenic metabolic therapy was 20.6 (13.8) months. The Response Assessment in Neuro-oncology Criteria was applied during the ketogenic metabolic therapy interval, indicating a complete response in eight patients and partial response in eight patients. The mean (SD) progression-free survival while patients maintained ketogenic metabolic therapy was 20.0 (14.4) months. CONCLUSION: Ketogenic metabolic therapy appears to convey a survival advantage within this patient series, which highlights the possibility that this therapy, when strictly applied, can augment the standard of care. Further exploration of this modality in a prospective series is warranted to formally explore this therapy.
Publication Date
6-1-2022
Publication Title
Cureus
ISSN
2168-8184
Volume
14
Issue
6
First Page
e26457
PubMed ID
35923675
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.7759/cureus.26457
Recommended Citation
Smith, Kris A.; Hendricks, Benjamin K.; DiDomenico, Joseph D.; Conway, Beth N.; Smith, Tracy L.; Azadi, Amir; and Fonkem, Ekokobe, "Ketogenic Metabolic Therapy for Glioma" (2022). Neurosurgery. 2175.
https://scholar.barrowneuro.org/neurosurgery/2175