血液悪性腫瘍およびクローン性造血の患者に利益をもたらす食事介入の活用
Leveraging Dietary Interventions to Benefit Patients with Hematologic Malignancies and Clonal Hematopoiesis.
Brzechffa Camille, Fleischman Angela G — Nutrients
AI要約
食事は、血液がんにおいて炎症、免疫、腸内環境に影響を与える重要な要素です。地中海食のような抗炎症食は炎症を抑え、植物性やカロリー制限食は肥満管理に役立つ可能性があります。また、高繊維食は化学療法後の腸内環境回復を助けます。初期研究は有望ですが、食事療法を標準治療に組み込むには、さらなる大規模な研究が必要です。
AI生成の要約です — 原文を読む
Abstract(原文)
Diet is a modifiable factor that influences multiple pathways relevant to hematologic malignancy, including systemic inflammation, immune cell activity, gut microbiota composition, and cancer cell metabolism. Translation of preclinical findings into clinical practice for hematologic malignancies remains nascent, although momentum is building to evaluate dietary interventions as a component of supportive and disease-modifying care. This review examines the mechanistic rationale for dietary interventions across the spectrum of clonal hematologic disorders and synthesizes current clinical evidence. Anti-inflammatory dietary patterns, particularly the Mediterranean diet, have demonstrated reductions in pro-inflammatory cytokines and may attenuate the inflammatory milieu that fuels clonal expansion. Obesity, which elevates the risk of developing hematologic malignancies and worsens clinical outcomes in diseases such as acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and acute myeloid leukemia, may be addressed through calorie-restricted, low-fat, or plant-based dietary strategies. Gut microbiota dysbiosis induced by chemotherapy represents another target, with high-fiber and plant-based diets showing promise in restoring microbial diversity and potentially enhancing treatment efficacy. Early-phase clinical trials in multiple myeloma, acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and myeloproliferative neoplasms have established feasibility and yielded preliminary signals warranting larger confirmatory studies. Larger, rigorously designed trials are needed to establish dietary interventions as legitimate therapeutic tools in the management of hematologic malignancies.
出典: PubMed (PMID: 42197020)。AI要約は情報提供のみを目的とし、医療的アドバイスを構成するものではありません。