Melatonin: Difference between revisions

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|usefulness_rating=4
|usefulness_rating=4
|notes=Melatonin is a hormone that regulates the body's diurnal rhythm and is used for the treatment of sleep disorders. In cancer treatment, it's hypothesized to boost the immune system, inhibit angiogenesis, and have direct cytotoxic effects on certain cancer cells. Clinical research, primarily in Italy, has explored its use alone or in combination with chemotherapy or immunotherapy, showing potential for increasing survival rates and reducing chemotherapy toxicity.
|notes=Melatonin is a hormone that regulates the body's diurnal rhythm and is used for the treatment of sleep disorders. In cancer treatment, it's hypothesized to boost the immune system, inhibit angiogenesis, and have direct cytotoxic effects on certain cancer cells. Clinical research, primarily in Italy, has explored its use alone or in combination with chemotherapy or immunotherapy, showing potential for increasing survival rates and reducing chemotherapy toxicity.
|category=Hormones
|category=Hormones and Cancer Therapy
|links=
|links=
* [Relevant study or information link]
* [Relevant study or information link]
|toxicity_level=1
|toxicity_level=1
|toxicity_explanation=Melatonin is considered to have a low toxicity level, with no known toxic side effects. It is generally regarded as safe for use in the dosages typically administered for both sleep disorders and experimental cancer treatment protocols.
|toxicity_explanation=Melatonin is considered to have a low toxicity level, with no known toxic side effects. It is generally regarded as safe for use in the dosages typically administered for both sleep disorders and experimental cancer treatment protocols.
|book_text=This is a naturally occurring hormone secreted by the pineal gland that regulates the
body's diurnal rhythm. It is commonly used for the treatment of jet lag and for insomnia.
It is readily available in any health food store and most drug stores. Its role in cancer
treatment has been based on the assumption that it boosts the immune system, with the
current hypothesis being that it augments the activity of T-helper cells. It recently also
has been shown to inhibit angiogenesis (225). It may also have direct cytotoxic effects on
some types of cancer cells, notably melanoma cells. It has no known toxic side effects.
Clinical research on the use of melatonin for cancer treatment has been done primarily in
Italy, where it has been used either as a single agent after radiation treatments, or in
combination with various chemotherapy or immunotherapy regimens, most frequently
interleukin-2. Part of the rationale for such combinations is that it decreases the side
effects of the chemotherapy, especially with respect to blood counts. One of the clinical
32
studies (226) randomly assigned 30 GBM patients either to radiation alone (n=16) or to
radiation concomitant with 20 mg/day of melatonin (n=14). Melatonin was continued
after completion of the radiation. Survival was significantly greater for subjects receiving
the melatonin. In terms of one-year survival rates, 6/14 patients receiving melatonin were
alive, while only 1/16 patients without melatonin was alive.
This GBM study involved a relatively small number of patients, so that the effects
should be considered tentative until a larger study is conducted. However, comparable
effects have been reported in a similar design for the use of melatonin with advanced
lung cancer (227). Like the GBM study, a substantial increase in survival rate occurred
for the patients receiving melatonin.
To date there have been at least a dozen phase-2 clinical trials using melatonin either
alone or in combination with other agents and five phase-3 trials involving random
assignment of subjects to melatonin versus some type of control group. The majority of
these has been relatively small and has involved patients in the terminal stages of their
disease, which is perhaps why American oncologists have largely ignored them.
However, some trials have been much larger and seem to leave little doubt that melatonin
significantly increases the efficacy of chemotherapy. One of the most extensive
randomized clinical trials involved 250 patients with advanced metastatic cancer of
various types (228). Patients were randomly assigned to chemotherapy alone (using
different chemotherapies for different types of cancer) or chemotherapy plus 20 mg of
melatonin per day. Objective tumor regression occurred in 42 (including 6 complete
regressions) of 124 patients receiving melatonin but in only 19/126 (with zero complete
regressions) of the control patients. A comparable difference occurred for survival rate:
63/124 of those receiving melatonin were alive after one year while only 29/126 were
alive of those receiving chemotherapy alone. A different trial, involving 100 patients with
metastatic non small-cell lung cancer (229), compared chemotherapy alone with
chemotherapy in combination with melatonin. With chemotherapy alone, 9 of 51 patients
had a partial tumor regression, while 17 of 49 chemo + melatonin patients had either a
complete (n=2) or partial (n=15) regression. Twenty percent of the chemo-alone patients
survived for one year and zero for two years, while the corresponding numbers for chemo
+ melatonin were 40% and 30%. Melatonin not only increased the efficacy of
chemotherapy, but also significantly reduced its toxicity.
The most extensive report included 370 patients, subdivided into three different types of
cancer: lung cancer (non-small cell), colorectal cancer, and gastric cancer (230).
Aggregated over all three types, the response rate (percentage of patients with tumor
regression) was 36% for those treated with chemotherapy and melatonin, versus 20% for
those treated with chemotherapy alone. The corresponding two-year survival rates were
25% vs. 13%. Melatonin’s benefits occurred for all three cancer types that were included.
Moreover, patients receiving melatonin had fewer side effects.
33
These trials leave little doubt that the effects of melatonin are of clinical significance.
Moreover, a recent study has shown that using multiple components of the pineal gland
secretions instead of melatonin alone enhances clinical effectiveness still further (231).
One caveat about the use of melatonin is that a recent randomized trial compared
radiation treatment for metastatic brain cancer with and without melatonin and found no
benefit of the melatonin (232). Given that almost all of the supporting evidence for the
use of melatonin has come from its addition to chemotherapy, it is possible that it offers
no benefit when added to radiation, perhaps because of its strong antioxidant properties.
}}
}}

Revision as of 21:19, 5 April 2024

Property Information
Drug Name Melatonin
FDA Approval No
Used for Jet lag, insomnia, various types of cancer including Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM)
Clinical Trial Phase Phase-2 and Phase-3 trials
Clinical Trial Explanation Not specified
Common Side Effects No known toxic side effects
OS without Not specified
OS with Improved survival in some cancer treatments
PFS without Not specified
PFS with Not specified
Usefulness Rating 4
Usefulness Explanation Not specified
Toxicity Level 1
Toxicity Explanation Melatonin is considered to have a low toxicity level, with no known toxic side effects. It is generally regarded as safe for use in the dosages typically administered for both sleep disorders and experimental cancer treatment protocols.

Notes: Melatonin is a hormone that regulates the body's diurnal rhythm and is used for the treatment of sleep disorders. In cancer treatment, it's hypothesized to boost the immune system, inhibit angiogenesis, and have direct cytotoxic effects on certain cancer cells. Clinical research, primarily in Italy, has explored its use alone or in combination with chemotherapy or immunotherapy, showing potential for increasing survival rates and reducing chemotherapy toxicity.

Links: * [Relevant study or information link]

From Ben Williams Book: This is a naturally occurring hormone secreted by the pineal gland that regulates the body's diurnal rhythm. It is commonly used for the treatment of jet lag and for insomnia. It is readily available in any health food store and most drug stores. Its role in cancer treatment has been based on the assumption that it boosts the immune system, with the current hypothesis being that it augments the activity of T-helper cells. It recently also has been shown to inhibit angiogenesis (225). It may also have direct cytotoxic effects on some types of cancer cells, notably melanoma cells. It has no known toxic side effects.

Clinical research on the use of melatonin for cancer treatment has been done primarily in Italy, where it has been used either as a single agent after radiation treatments, or in combination with various chemotherapy or immunotherapy regimens, most frequently interleukin-2. Part of the rationale for such combinations is that it decreases the side effects of the chemotherapy, especially with respect to blood counts. One of the clinical 32

studies (226) randomly assigned 30 GBM patients either to radiation alone (n=16) or to radiation concomitant with 20 mg/day of melatonin (n=14). Melatonin was continued after completion of the radiation. Survival was significantly greater for subjects receiving the melatonin. In terms of one-year survival rates, 6/14 patients receiving melatonin were alive, while only 1/16 patients without melatonin was alive.

This GBM study involved a relatively small number of patients, so that the effects should be considered tentative until a larger study is conducted. However, comparable effects have been reported in a similar design for the use of melatonin with advanced lung cancer (227). Like the GBM study, a substantial increase in survival rate occurred for the patients receiving melatonin.

To date there have been at least a dozen phase-2 clinical trials using melatonin either alone or in combination with other agents and five phase-3 trials involving random assignment of subjects to melatonin versus some type of control group. The majority of these has been relatively small and has involved patients in the terminal stages of their disease, which is perhaps why American oncologists have largely ignored them.

However, some trials have been much larger and seem to leave little doubt that melatonin significantly increases the efficacy of chemotherapy. One of the most extensive randomized clinical trials involved 250 patients with advanced metastatic cancer of various types (228). Patients were randomly assigned to chemotherapy alone (using different chemotherapies for different types of cancer) or chemotherapy plus 20 mg of melatonin per day. Objective tumor regression occurred in 42 (including 6 complete regressions) of 124 patients receiving melatonin but in only 19/126 (with zero complete regressions) of the control patients. A comparable difference occurred for survival rate: 63/124 of those receiving melatonin were alive after one year while only 29/126 were alive of those receiving chemotherapy alone. A different trial, involving 100 patients with metastatic non small-cell lung cancer (229), compared chemotherapy alone with chemotherapy in combination with melatonin. With chemotherapy alone, 9 of 51 patients had a partial tumor regression, while 17 of 49 chemo + melatonin patients had either a complete (n=2) or partial (n=15) regression. Twenty percent of the chemo-alone patients survived for one year and zero for two years, while the corresponding numbers for chemo + melatonin were 40% and 30%. Melatonin not only increased the efficacy of chemotherapy, but also significantly reduced its toxicity.

The most extensive report included 370 patients, subdivided into three different types of cancer: lung cancer (non-small cell), colorectal cancer, and gastric cancer (230). Aggregated over all three types, the response rate (percentage of patients with tumor regression) was 36% for those treated with chemotherapy and melatonin, versus 20% for those treated with chemotherapy alone. The corresponding two-year survival rates were 25% vs. 13%. Melatonin’s benefits occurred for all three cancer types that were included. Moreover, patients receiving melatonin had fewer side effects. 33

These trials leave little doubt that the effects of melatonin are of clinical significance. Moreover, a recent study has shown that using multiple components of the pineal gland secretions instead of melatonin alone enhances clinical effectiveness still further (231). One caveat about the use of melatonin is that a recent randomized trial compared radiation treatment for metastatic brain cancer with and without melatonin and found no benefit of the melatonin (232). Given that almost all of the supporting evidence for the use of melatonin has come from its addition to chemotherapy, it is possible that it offers no benefit when added to radiation, perhaps because of its strong antioxidant properties.Property "Has original text" (as page type) with input value "This is a naturally occurring hormone secreted by the pineal gland that regulates the</br>body's diurnal rhythm. It is commonly used for the treatment of jet lag and for insomnia.</br>It is readily available in any health food store and most drug stores. Its role in cancer</br>treatment has been based on the assumption that it boosts the immune system, with the</br>current hypothesis being that it augments the activity of T-helper cells. It recently also</br>has been shown to inhibit angiogenesis (225). It may also have direct cytotoxic effects on</br>some types of cancer cells, notably melanoma cells. It has no known toxic side effects.</br></br>Clinical research on the use of melatonin for cancer treatment has been done primarily in</br>Italy, where it has been used either as a single agent after radiation treatments, or in</br>combination with various chemotherapy or immunotherapy regimens, most frequently</br>interleukin-2. Part of the rationale for such combinations is that it decreases the side</br>effects of the chemotherapy, especially with respect to blood counts. One of the clinical</br>32</br></br>studies (226) randomly assigned 30 GBM patients either to radiation alone (n=16) or to</br>radiation concomitant with 20 mg/day of melatonin (n=14). Melatonin was continued</br>after completion of the radiation. Survival was significantly greater for subjects receiving</br>the melatonin. In terms of one-year survival rates, 6/14 patients receiving melatonin were</br>alive, while only 1/16 patients without melatonin was alive.</br></br>This GBM study involved a relatively small number of patients, so that the effects</br>should be considered tentative until a larger study is conducted. However, comparable</br>effects have been reported in a similar design for the use of melatonin with advanced</br>lung cancer (227). Like the GBM study, a substantial increase in survival rate occurred</br>for the patients receiving melatonin.</br></br>To date there have been at least a dozen phase-2 clinical trials using melatonin either</br>alone or in combination with other agents and five phase-3 trials involving random</br>assignment of subjects to melatonin versus some type of control group. The majority of</br>these has been relatively small and has involved patients in the terminal stages of their</br>disease, which is perhaps why American oncologists have largely ignored them.</br></br>However, some trials have been much larger and seem to leave little doubt that melatonin</br>significantly increases the efficacy of chemotherapy. One of the most extensive</br>randomized clinical trials involved 250 patients with advanced metastatic cancer of</br>various types (228). Patients were randomly assigned to chemotherapy alone (using</br>different chemotherapies for different types of cancer) or chemotherapy plus 20 mg of</br>melatonin per day. Objective tumor regression occurred in 42 (including 6 complete</br>regressions) of 124 patients receiving melatonin but in only 19/126 (with zero complete</br>regressions) of the control patients. A comparable difference occurred for survival rate:</br>63/124 of those receiving melatonin were alive after one year while only 29/126 were</br>alive of those receiving chemotherapy alone. A different trial, involving 100 patients with</br>metastatic non small-cell lung cancer (229), compared chemotherapy alone with</br>chemotherapy in combination with melatonin. With chemotherapy alone, 9 of 51 patients</br>had a partial tumor regression, while 17 of 49 chemo + melatonin patients had either a</br>complete (n=2) or partial (n=15) regression. Twenty percent of the chemo-alone patients</br>survived for one year and zero for two years, while the corresponding numbers for chemo</br>+ melatonin were 40% and 30%. Melatonin not only increased the efficacy of</br>chemotherapy, but also significantly reduced its toxicity.</br></br>The most extensive report included 370 patients, subdivided into three different types of</br>cancer: lung cancer (non-small cell), colorectal cancer, and gastric cancer (230).</br>Aggregated over all three types, the response rate (percentage of patients with tumor</br>regression) was 36% for those treated with chemotherapy and melatonin, versus 20% for</br>those treated with chemotherapy alone. The corresponding two-year survival rates were</br>25% vs. 13%. Melatonin’s benefits occurred for all three cancer types that were included.</br>Moreover, patients receiving melatonin had fewer side effects.</br>33</br></br>These trials leave little doubt that the effects of melatonin are of clinical significance.</br>Moreover, a recent study has shown that using multiple components of the pineal gland</br>secretions instead of melatonin alone enhances clinical effectiveness still further (231).</br>One caveat about the use of melatonin is that a recent randomized trial compared</br>radiation treatment for metastatic brain cancer with and without melatonin and found no</br>benefit of the melatonin (232). Given that almost all of the supporting evidence for the</br>use of melatonin has come from its addition to chemotherapy, it is possible that it offers</br>no benefit when added to radiation, perhaps because of its strong antioxidant properties." contains invalid characters or is incomplete and therefore can cause unexpected results during a query or annotation process.

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