As a treatment for advanced cancer, shark cartilage fails to benefit patients and its adverse effects lead to poor
compliance. A clinical trial published in the July 1, 2005 issue of CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer
Society, finds there was no difference in overall survival or quality of life between patients who received shark cartilage
and those who received a placebo.
interscience.wiley/cancer-newsroom
Some experiments have shown that some forms of shark cartilage possess a modest ability to slow the growth of new blood
vessels in laboratory cell cultures and in animals, but the effects on humans are not known. Interest in shark cartilage grew
after a television news magazine aired a segment in 1993 that showed patients with advanced cancer in Cuba who had gone into
remission after being treated with shark cartilage. The results of the study were never published in a peer-reviewed medical
journal, and the National Cancer Institute (NCI) later concluded the results of the Cuban study were "incomplete and
unimpressive."
Mayo Clinic Oncologist Charles L. Loprinzi, M.D., and his colleagues in the North Central Cancer Treatment Group (NCCTG)
designed and conducted a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind clinical trial to investigate the efficacy associated
with shark cartilage as a treatment for breast and colorectal cancer.
Toxicity related to shark cartilage resulted in significant trial drop out after one month. There was no suggestion that
shark cartilage caused any improvement in overall survival nor any significant improvement in quality of life. In fact, some
quality of life measurements tended to worsen among patients treated with shark cartilage.
The authors conclude, "shark cartilage did not demonstrate any efficacy in patients with advanced breast or colorectal
cancers."
Article: "Evaluation of Shark Cartilage in Patients with Advanced Cancer: A North Central Cancer Treatment Group Trial,"
Charles L. Loprinzi, Ralph Levitt, Debra Barton, Jeff Sloan, Pam Atherton, Denise Smith, Shaker Dakhil, Dennis Moore, Jr.,
James E. Krook, Kendrith M. Rowland, Jr., Miroslaw Mazurczak, Alan Berg, George Kim, CANCER; Published Online: May 23, 2005
(DOI: 10.1002/cncr.21107); Print Issue Date: July 1, 2005.
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
interscience.wiley
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