"Enjoy glass of wine before eating:" a randomized trial to test the orexigenic effects of this advice in advanced cancer patients.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine whether wine could improve appetite in advanced cancer patients experiencing appetite loss.
Results Summary
The study found no statistically significant improvement in appetite or weight stability in advanced cancer patients consuming wine compared to nutritional supplements. Both interventions were well tolerated, but wine did not demonstrate superior efficacy.
Population
Advanced cancer patients with self-reported loss of appetite.
Effective Dosage
White wine with ≤15% alcohol content, twice a day.
Duration
3-4 weeks.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
white wine with ≤15% alcohol content twice a day for 3-4 weeks | increase | appetite | advanced cancer patients with self-reported loss of appetite | 48% | reported an improvement in appetite | #1 |
nutritional supplement, such as Boost® or Ensure® | increase | appetite | advanced cancer patients with self-reported loss of appetite | 37% | reported improvement | #2 |
white wine with ≤15% alcohol content twice a day for 3-4 weeks | no change | appetite-related questions and questionnaire items | advanced cancer patients with self-reported loss of appetite | no statistically significant differences | showed no statistically significant differences | #3 |
nutritional supplement, such as Boost® or Ensure® | no change | appetite-related questions and questionnaire items | advanced cancer patients with self-reported loss of appetite | no statistically significant differences | showed no statistically significant differences | #4 |
white wine with ≤15% alcohol content twice a day for 3-4 weeks | no change | weight | advanced cancer patients with self-reported loss of appetite | 9% | achieved weight stability | #5 |
nutritional supplement, such as Boost® or Ensure® | no change | weight | advanced cancer patients with self-reported loss of appetite | 9% | achieved weight stability | #6 |
white wine with ≤15% alcohol content twice a day for 3-4 weeks | no change | median survival | advanced cancer patients with self-reported loss of appetite | not statistically different | was not statistically different | #7 |
nutritional supplement, such as Boost® or Ensure® | no change | median survival | advanced cancer patients with self-reported loss of appetite | not statistically different | was not statistically different | #8 |
wine | no change | appetite | advanced cancer patients | - | does not improve | #9 |
wine | no change | weight | advanced cancer patients | - | does not improve | #10 |
BACKGROUND: Because the extant literature suggests wine increases appetite, this study sought to determine whether this effect could be observed in advanced cancer patients with appetite loss. METHODS: Advanced cancer patients with self-reported loss of appetite were randomly assigned to white wine with ≤15 % alcohol content twice a day for 3-4 weeks versus a nutritional supplement, such as Boost® or Ensure®. Patients assigned to wine were encouraged to also take a nutritional supplement, whereas patients assigned to the nutritional supplement arm were told to abstain completely from alcohol. Patient-reported outcomes were captured with a validated questionnaire to assess the primary endpoint of appetite improvement. RESULTS: A total of 141 patients (118 evaluable) were enrolled. Twenty-eight patients (48 %) in the wine arm reported an improvement in appetite at some point during the treatment period, whereas 22 patients (37 %) assigned to the nutritional supplement arm also reported improvement (p = 0.35). Other appetite-related questions and questionnaire items showed no statistically significant differences between treatment arms. In both arms, approximately 9 % of patients achieved weight stability (p = 0.98); median survival was not statistically different. Both interventions were well tolerated. CONCLUSION: As prescribed in this trial, wine does not improve appetite or weight in advanced cancer patients.