Body-composition changes in patients who gain weight while receiving megestrol acetate
- PMID: 8418227
- DOI: 10.1200/JCO.1993.11.1.152
Body-composition changes in patients who gain weight while receiving megestrol acetate
Abstract
Purpose: Randomized placebo-controlled clinical trials have now established that megestrol acetate causes appetite stimulation and weight gain in patients with anorexia and/or cachexia. There is a paucity of available data to delineate the substance of this increased weight.
Patients and methods: Using dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry and tritiated body water methodologies, we performed body-composition measurements in 12 patients with advanced cancer before the institution of oral megestrol acetate (800 mg/d) and at subsequent 2-month intervals.
Results: Seven of the 12 patients gained weight (2.1 to 16.5 kg) and had repeat body-composition measurements performed at the time of maximum weight gain. The vast majority of the gained weight was clearly from an increase in adipose tissue, while there was a suggestion that an increase in body fluid was responsible for a minority of the weight gain.
Conclusion: Megestrol acetate-induced weight gain is primarily the result of an increase in body mass.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical