Appetite stimulation with megestrol acetate in cachectic cancer patients.

  • 1 December 1986
    • journal article
    • Vol. 13, 37-43
Abstract
Cachexia is often a severe problem in the management of cancer and other illnesses because it adds to the morbidity of the underlying disease and complicates its treatment. Megestrol acetate has been observed anecdotally to produce weight gain. A review of our experience, and our ongoing phase I/II study of high-dose megestrol acetate for breast cancer, revealed that weight gain occurred in nearly one third (27%) of patients at conventional doses (160 mg/d), and that a marked weight gain (median, 5.1 kg; range, 0.9 to 20.1 kg) occurred in 27 of 28 patients with breast cancer during treatment with high doses of megestrol acetate. Subjective improvement in appetite occurred in most patients at low doses and in most patients at high doses. Further, nearly one half (48%) of patients at conventional doses and virtually all patients at high doses experienced an increased sense of well-being. Our data suggest that megestrol acetate has a potential role in producing subjective improvement, sense of well-being, and increase in appetite and weight, and that the effect may be dose related. Further research is necessary to understand the mechanism of appetite stimulation and/or anabolic effect.

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