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This study is currently
recruiting patient
Sponsored by National Center for Complementary
and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM)
Purpose
The purpose of this Phase 1 study is to: 1.
determine the maximum tolerated dose of capsules containing 500mg
of freeze dried noni fruit extract, 2. define toxicities associated
with the ingestion of noni, 3. collect preliminary information
on the efficacy of noni in respect to anti-tumor and symptom control
properties to help select specific patients for subsequent Phase
2 studies, 3.identify chemical constituents of the extract that
can be used to characterize the bioavailability and pharmacokinetics
of noni food supplement.
| Condition |
Treatment or Intervention |
Phase |
- Neoplasms
- Neoplasm Metastasis
|
- Drug: Noni
Extract
|
-
Phase I
-
|
MEDLINEplus related topics: Cancer (General);
Cancer--Living with Cancer
Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Treatment
Further Study Details:
This Phase I study of noni in cancer patients
represents a first step in the systematic study of Complementary
and Alternative Medicine (CAM) practices that draw on Asian
and Pacific Island cultural traditions of healing to control
cancer and its related symptoms. Noni, extracted from Morinda
citifolia or the Indian mulberry plant, is included in the traditional
pharmacopoeias of Native Hawaiians, other Pacific Islanders
and Asian populations, and has been used to treat various diseases
for hundreds of years. It is now commonly taken by cancer patients
based on purported usefulness in the disease although there
is little scientific evidence to either support or refute these
claims. A large marketing enterprise and at least eleven different
suppliers supports the food supplement's popularity. The broad
long range objectives which this study will initiate are to
define the usefulness of noni extracts for cancer patients.
The hypothesis to be tested is that noni at a specified dosing
provides cancer patients with a sufficient benefit to toxicity
profile to be useful as a therapeutic. Specific aims of this
study are: 1. Determine the maximum tolerated dose of capsules
containing 375mg of freeze-dried noni fruit extract. 2. Define
toxicities associated with the ingestion of noni. 3. Collect
preliminary information on the efficacy of noni in respect to
anti-tumor and symptom control properties to help select specific
patients for subsequent Phase II studies. 4. Identify chemical
constituents of the extract that can be used to characterize
the bioavailability and pharmacokinetics of noni food supplement.
Eligibility
Genders Eligible for Study: Both
Criteria
Patients must:
- Have a pathologically or cytologically verified diagnosis
of cancer and evidence of disease for which no standard
treatment is available;
- Be ambulatory, capable of self care, and up and about
more than 50% of waking hours;
- Have completed all other cancer treatments at least four
weeks previously;
- Have been on any medications considered by their physician
to be essential to their health (e.g. lipid lowering, antidiabetic
, antihypertensive) at consistent dosing at least four weeks
prior to starting noni;
- Agree to take no other CAM treatments while taking noni
and agree to keep a diary, recording all medications taken
daily, including all non prescription products and to record
the time that noni is taken.
Location and Contact Information
- Hawaii
-
- University of Hawaii,
Cancer Research Center, Honolulu, Hawaii, 96813, United States;
Recruiting
-
Study chairs or principal investigators
- Brian F. Issell, MD, FRACP, Principal Investigator
- University of Hawaii
More Information
- Study ID Numbers 1 R21 AT00896-01
-
- Date study started November 2001; Study Completion
Date June 2003
- Record last reviewed April 2002
-
- NLM Identifier NCT00033878
- ClinicalTrials.gov processed this
record on 2002-10-29