Metabolomic profiling of cancer-related fatigue involved in cachexia and chemotherapy

Author:

Okinaka Yuki1,Kageyama Susumu1,Goto Toshiyuki2,Sugimoto Masahiro3,Tomita Atsumi3,Aizawa Yumi3,Kobayashi Kenichi1,Wada Akinori1,Kawauchi Akihiro1,Kataoka Yosky2

Affiliation:

1. Shiga University of Medical Science

2. Kobe University

3. Tokyo Medical University

Abstract

Abstract Patients with advanced cancer are frequently burdened with a severe sensation of fatigue called cancer-related fatigue (CRF). CRF is induced at various stages and treatments, such as cachexia and chemotherapy, and reduces the overall survival of patients. Objective and quantitative assessment of CRF could contribute to the diagnosis and prediction of treatment efficacy. However, such studies have not been intensively performed, particularly regarding metabolic profiles. Here, we conducted plasma metabolomics of 15 patients with urological cancer. The patients with and without fatigue, including those with cachexia or chemotherapy-induced fatigue, were compared. Significantly lower concentrations of valine and tryptophan were observed in fatigued patients than in non-fatigued patients. In addition, significantly higher concentrations of polyamine pathway metabolites were observed in patients with fatigue and cachexia than in those without cachexia. Patients with exacerbated fatigue due to chemotherapy showed significantly decreased cysteine and methionine metabolism before chemotherapy compared with those without fatigue exacerbation. These findings suggest that plasma metabolic profiles could help improve the diagnosis and monitoring of CRF.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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