Pediatric Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
OmegaChild - Omega-3 Supplementation to Children Now in Full Remission From a Previous Cancer; an Early Phase Dose-finding Study.
The purpose of this study is to find an optimal dose of omega-3 that can be given to children who have completed cancer therapy. The future aim is to add omega-3 to conventional cancer treatment modalities and thereby hopefully increase the treatment efficacy, which will have to be addressed in subsequent phase-2 studies.
The rationale for this phase-1 trial is to find an appropriate dose of omega-3 for future
phase-2 studies. The investigators aim at defining a dose that can safely be given to
children previously treated for cancer, and that does not cause unacceptable side effects. In
a longer perspective, randomized control trials are planned where the supplement is given for
longer periods of time, and in combination with conventional cancer treatment. In preparation
for these trials, this dose finding study was designed that also evaluates compliance.
Subsequently the investigators hope that this supplementation can be beneficial for children
during both cancer treatment and after remission.
The study population consists of children judged to be in complete clinical remission from
cancer. In a phase 1 trial, one usually uses healthy individuals as study subjects, but in
pediatric studies this is not allowed. Therefore patients who are in full remission were
chosen as study objects, but who still come to the clinic for regular follow-ups. This group
of patients is relevant for this study since it represents all ages and base-line diets, all
kinds of childhood cancers, and because they have suffered from cancer and in many cases
still live with the severe consequences of it.
The study is designed to give five groups of eight individuals each different doses of
omega-3 adjusted to body surface area. The first group starts out on a dose of omega-3 fatty
acids that is similar to the generally recommended daily intake for adults (200-400 mg). A
dose escalation is then done performed group wise. The highest possible dose in this study (2
x 3000mg/day at dose level 3000 mg/m2 to a child at 1.55 m2, 3871 mg/m2) is still lower than
what has previously been given as maximum to children in other studies. The investigators
will keep escalating the dose level within the study only as long as no unacceptable side
effects are reported.
The administration is done orally by drinking 200 mL of omega-3 supplemented fruit juice
daily. It has a good fruity taste, low amounts of sugar, and no fish flavour. This should
facilitate treatment compliance for the children in particular compared to when omega-3 is
given in capsules - the commonest choice in other studies, but less suitable for children.
Compliance is important and not further jeopardized by trying to divide the fruit juice in
less amounts than the whole package, but the individually prescribed dose as well as the
actual amount ingested will be recorded and exact calculations used in the analysis of the
study.
All study results are primarily evaluated on an intention-to-treat basis, but will also be
calculated as treated per protocol and further calculated on the exact dose consumed over 90
days given the compliance in terms of consumed number of fruit juice packages.
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