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Enhancement of Cancer Therapy Using Ketogenic Diet
Book chapter

Enhancement of Cancer Therapy Using Ketogenic Diet

Melissa A Fath, Andrean L Simons, Jeffrey Erickson, Mark E Anderson and Douglas R Spitz
Oxidative Stress in Cancer Biology and Therapy, pp.47-58
Oxidative Stress in Applied Basic Research and Clinical Practice, Humana Press
10/21/2011
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-61779-397-4_3

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Abstract

Ketogenic diets, which are low in protein and carbohydrates and high in fats, result in elevated ketones (β-hydroxybuturate and acetoacetate; precursors to Acetyl-CoA) forcing cells to rely more heavily on mitochondrial metabolism for energy production. It has been hypothesized that cancer cells, relative to normal cells, exist in a condition of chronic metabolic oxidative stress mediated by O2•− and H2O2, with a major site of pro-oxidant production being mitochondrial electron transport chain complexes. If cancer cells (relative to normal cells) have defective mitochondrial O2 metabolism that results in chronic metabolic oxidative stress and ketogenic diets forcing cancer cells to rely more heavily on mitochondrial O2 metabolism, then ketogenic diets would be expected to selectively cause oxidative stress in cancer cells. The increased steady-state level of oxidative stress in turn would be expected to selectively sensitize cancer cells to conventional cancer therapeutic agents that cause cell killing via oxidative stress. The current study demonstrates that a ketogenic diet increases parameters indicative of oxidative stress, as demonstrated by an increase in oxidized proteins in the plasma of mice fed a ketogenic diet, and also sensitizes FaDu head and neck cancer xenograft tumors to the antitumor effects of cisplatin. These results support the hypothesis that ketogenic diets may be useful adjuvants for improving outcomes with cisplatin in head and neck cancer therapy.
Ketogenic Diet Protein Carbonyl Content Sensitize Cancer Cell Standard Rodent Diet Systemic Oxidative Stress

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