Complementary Treatment with Mistletoe Extracts During Chemotherapy: Safety, Neutropenia, Fever, and Quality of Life Assessed in a Randomized Study
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Abstract
Abstract
Objectives: Evaluate the safety and clinical response of
complementary treatment with European mistletoe extracts during chemotherapy.
Design:
Monocentric controlled trial with 95 patients randomized into three groups.
Settings/Location:
National Cancer Research Center of Serbia.
Subjects: Breast cancer patients (stage T1–3N0–2M 0) undergoing
surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy with six cycles of cyclophosphamide, adriamycin, and
5-fluorouracil.
Interventions: Two different European mistletoe extracts (Helixor A, Iscador M
Spez) were injected three times per week during 18 weeks of chemotherapy in the mistletoe group. Five-year follow-up
of routine visits was documented in case report forms.
Outcome measures: Safety was assessed by measuring adverse
events, body temperature during chemotherapy, and probability of relapse or metastasis in a 5-year follow-up. During
chemotherapy, the neutrophil count and quality of life according to EORTC QLQ-C30 were
assessed.
Results: The two patient groups receiving different complementary mistletoe treatments
were integrated into one mistletoe group for this safety analysis. Patients in the mistletoe group did not develop
more fever symptoms than patients in the control group (two short-term events in each group). No significant
differences in probability of relapse or metastasis were measured between the groups ( p = 0.7637). The mistletoe
group
showed a trend toward less neutropenia ( p = 0.178) and improved pain and appetite loss scores ( p <
0.0001 and p = 0.047, respectively) while having positive, but not significant, impact on other EORTC QLQ-C30
scores.
Conclusions: Mistletoe extracts were safe in this clinical study. Neither did
subcutaneous injections induce fever, nor did they influence the frequency of relapse and metastasis within 5 years.
This result suggests that mistletoe extracts had no adverse interactions with the anticancer agents used in this
study. Furthermore, certain side effects of chemotherapy decreased under this complementary treatment in breast cancer
patients.
Keywords: mistletoe therapy, chemotherapy, breast cancer, randomized clinical trial,
5-year follow-up, safety
Citation: Pelzer, F., & Tröger, W. (2018). Complementary Treatment with Mistletoe Extracts During Chemotherapy: Safety, Neutropenia, Fever, and Quality of Life Assessed in a Randomized Study. The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 24(9–10), 954–961. https://doi.org/10.1089/acm.2018.0159
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Pelzer, F., & Tröger, W. (2018). Complementary Treatment with Mistletoe Extracts During Chemotherapy: Safety, Neutropenia, Fever, and Quality of Life Assessed in a Randomized Study. The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 24(9–10), 954–961. https://doi.org/10.1089/acm.2018.0159