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GHRP-2

Pralmorelin, Growth Hormone Releasing Peptide-2, KP-102

Quick Stats
Studies 230
Trials 1
Score 3
2008 pubmed

Growth hormone releasing peptide 2 reverses anorexia associated with chemotherapy with 5-fluoruracil in colon cancer cell-bearing mice.

Perboni. Simona S; Bowers. Cyril C; Kojima. Shinya S; Asakawa. Akihiro A; Inui. Akio A

Key Findings

  • GHRP‑2 alone increased food intake in tumor‑bearing mice.
  • Combining GHRP‑2 with 5‑FU boosted appetite more than 5‑FU alone (significant at 6 h and day 3).
  • Median survival was modestly longer with the combo (18 days vs 15.5 days) but not statistically significant.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the study suggests GHRP‑2 could be explored as a way to counteract chemotherapy‑induced loss of appetite, potentially improving quality of life. However, the data are from mice only, doses aren’t directly translatable, and human safety/efficacy haven’t been proven, so any use would be experimental and should be approached with caution.

Summary

In a mouse study, giving the peptide GHRP‑2 together with the chemotherapy drug 5‑fluorouracil helped cancer‑bearing mice eat more and feel less anorexic. The combo also hinted at a slightly longer survival, though the difference wasn't statistically solid.

Abstract

The cancer-associated anorexia-cachexia syndrome is observed in 80% of patients with advanced-stage cancer, and is one of the major obstacles in chemotherapy. Ghrelin is a orexigenic hormone that has been proposed to prevent anorexia. Aim of the study was to determine whether the addition of the ghrelin agonist growth hormone releasing peptide 2 (GHRP-2) to cytotoxic therapy with 5-fluoruracil (5-FU) prevents the anorexia associated with chemotherapy in cancer cachectic mice. Thirty-three BALB/c female tumour-bearing mice were randomized to receive a solution containing: (a) placebo; (b) GHRP-2; (c) 5-FU; or (d) 5-FU+GHRP-2. Ten BALB/c no tumour-bearing mice received placebo solution. Food intake and survival were checked. Six hours after the drug injection the cumulative food intake was significantly increased in mice treated with the combination of 5-FU+GHRP-2 versus the 5-FU alone (P=0.0096). On day 3, the cumulative food intake of mice treated with GHRP-2, 5-FU and 5-FU+GHRP-2 significantly increased compared with naive and vehicle groups (P=0.0007, P=0.0038 and P=0.0166, respectively). The median survival time was longer in 5-FU+GHRP-2 treated mice than in those with 5-FU, although it was not significant (18 d versus 15.5 d, P=0.7). For the first time, we demonstrated that the addition of GHRP-2 to cytotoxic therapy with 5-FU improved appetite in tumour-bearing mice with anorexia/cachexia syndrome in early stage. These data suggest that GHRP-2 may improve the efficacy of therapy and the quality of life of cancer patients thank to the amelioration of their nutritional state.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2008

Date

2008-11-07T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3748/wjg.14.6303