Efficacy and safety of oral lactoferrin supplementation in combination with rHuEPO-beta for the treatment of anemia in advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy: open-label, randomized controlled study.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to compare the efficacy and safety of oral lactoferrin versus intravenous iron, both combined with rHuEPO, for treating anemia in advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy.
Results Summary
Both oral lactoferrin and intravenous iron, combined with rHuEPO, significantly increased hemoglobin levels with no difference in efficacy between the two treatments. Ferritin levels decreased with lactoferrin but increased with intravenous iron.
Population
148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy
Effective Dosage
Ferric gluconate (125 mg i.v. weekly) or lactoferrin (200 mg/day)
Duration
12 weeks
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
i.v. iron | increase | recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) | anemic cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | improves the efficacy | #1 |
oral lactoferrin combined with rHuEPO | increase | hemoglobin | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | showed a significant hemoglobin increase | #2 |
i.v. iron (ferric gluconate) combined with rHuEPO | increase | hemoglobin | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | showed a significant hemoglobin increase | #3 |
oral lactoferrin combined with rHuEPO | no change | mean hemoglobin increase | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | no difference in the mean hemoglobin increase | #4 |
i.v. iron (ferric gluconate) combined with rHuEPO | no change | mean hemoglobin increase | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | no difference in the mean hemoglobin increase | #5 |
oral lactoferrin combined with rHuEPO | no change | hematopoietic response | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | no difference in the hematopoietic response | #6 |
i.v. iron (ferric gluconate) combined with rHuEPO | no change | hematopoietic response | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | no difference in the hematopoietic response | #7 |
oral lactoferrin combined with rHuEPO | no change | time to hematopoietic response | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | no difference in the time to hematopoietic response | #8 |
i.v. iron (ferric gluconate) combined with rHuEPO | no change | time to hematopoietic response | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | no difference in the time to hematopoietic response | #9 |
oral lactoferrin combined with rHuEPO | no change | serum iron | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | no difference in the mean change in serum iron | #10 |
i.v. iron (ferric gluconate) combined with rHuEPO | no change | serum iron | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | no difference in the mean change in serum iron | #11 |
oral lactoferrin combined with rHuEPO | no change | C-reactive protein | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | no difference in the mean change in C-reactive protein | #12 |
i.v. iron (ferric gluconate) combined with rHuEPO | no change | C-reactive protein | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | no difference in the mean change in C-reactive protein | #13 |
oral lactoferrin combined with rHuEPO | no change | erythrocyte sedimentation rate | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | no difference in the mean change in erythrocyte sedimentation rate | #14 |
i.v. iron (ferric gluconate) combined with rHuEPO | no change | erythrocyte sedimentation rate | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | no difference in the mean change in erythrocyte sedimentation rate | #15 |
oral lactoferrin combined with rHuEPO | decrease | ferritin | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | ferritin decreased | #16 |
i.v. iron (ferric gluconate) combined with rHuEPO | increase | ferritin | 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | ferritin increased | #17 |
oral lactoferrin combined with rHuEPO | neutral | treatment of anemia | advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | show similar efficacy | #18 |
i.v. iron combined with rHuEPO | neutral | treatment of anemia | advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy | - | show similar efficacy | #19 |
Advanced-stage cancer patients often suffer from anemia that closely resembles the anemia of chronic inflammatory diseases characterized by specific changes in iron homeostasis and absorption. i.v. iron improves the efficacy of recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) in anemic cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy. We report the results of an open-label, randomized, prospective trial aimed at testing the efficacy and safety of treatment with oral lactoferrin versus i.v. iron, both combined with rHuEPO, for the treatment of anemia in a population of 148 advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy. All patients received s.c. rHuEPO-beta, 30,000 UI once weekly for 12 weeks, and were randomly assigned to ferric gluconate (125 mg i.v. weekly) or lactoferrin (200 mg/day). Both arms showed a significant hemoglobin increase. No difference in the mean hemoglobin increase or the hematopoietic response, time to hematopoietic response, or mean change in serum iron, C-reactive protein, or erythrocyte sedimentation rate were observed between arms. In contrast, ferritin decreased in the lactoferrin arm whereas it increased in the i.v. iron arm. In conclusion, these results show similar efficacy for oral lactoferrin and for i.v. iron, combined with rHuEPO, for the treatment of anemia in advanced cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy.