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Author
Maki, Masatoshi Department of Hospital Pharmacy, NHO Fukuyama Medical Center
Takada, Ryo Department of Hospital Pharmacy, NHO Fukuyama Medical Center
Ishigo, Tomoyuki Department of Pharmacy, Sapporo Medical University Hospital
Fujiwara, Miki Department of Hospital Pharmacy, NHO Fukuyama Medical Center
Takahashi, Yoko Department of Hospital Pharmacy, NHO Fukuyama Medical Center
Otsuka, Shinya Department of Surgery, NHO Fukuyama Medical Center
Tamura, Koji Department of Hospital Pharmacy, NHO Fukuyama Medical Center
Hamaoka, Terutaka Department of Hospital Pharmacy, NHO Fukuyama Medical Center
Abstract
Anamorelin (ANAM) is used to treat cancer-associated cachexia, a syndrome involving muscle loss and anorexia. The timing of the initiation of ANAM treatment is crucial to its efficacy. Although the body mass index (BMI) is a diagnostic criterion for cancer cachexia, no studies have explored its association with ANAM efficacy. We conducted a single-center, retrospective cohort study to investigate the association between the pre-treatment BMI and ANAM efficacy in patients with cancer-associated cachexia (n=47). The ANAM treatment was considered effective if the patient’s appetite improved within 30 days of treatment initiation. We calculated a BMI cutoff value (19.5 kg/m2) and used it to divide the patients into high- and low-BMI groups. Their background, clinical laboratory values, cancer types, and treatment lines were investigated. Twenty (42.6%) had a high BMI (≥ 19.5 kg/m2) and 27 (57.4%) had a low BMI (< 19.5 kg/m2). High BMI was significantly associated with ANAM effectiveness (odds ratio 7.86, 95% confidence interval 1.99-31.00, p=0.003). Together these results indicate that it is beneficial to initiate ANAM treatment before a patient’s BMI drops below 19.5 kg/m2. Our findings will help advance cancer cachexia treatment and serve as a reference for clinicians to predict ANAM’s efficacy.
Keywords
anamorelin
cancer-associated cachexia
body mass index
albumin
efficacy rate
Amo Type
Original Article
Publication Title
Acta Medica Okayama
Published Date
2025-04
Volume
volume79
Issue
issue2
Publisher
Okayama University Medical School
Start Page
65
End Page
73
ISSN
0386-300X
NCID
AA00508441
Content Type
Journal Article
language
English
Copyright Holders
Copyright Ⓒ 2025 by Okayama University Medical School
File Version
publisher
Refereed
True