Title

Green Tea Intake for the Maintenance of Complete Remission in Women With Advanced Ovarian Carcinoma
Phase II Study: Green Tea Intake for the Maintenance of Complete Remission in Women With Advanced Ovarian Carcinoma
  • Phase

    Phase 2
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Intervention/Treatment

    tea ...
  • Study Participants

    16
Green tea is extracted from steam treated leaves, allowing the preservation of catechins, the active elements of the infusion. Catechins are recognized for their anti-cancer activity. Catechins act on the capacity of cancer to disseminate to other organs because of their anti-protease action. Proteases are proteins capable of digesting the cancer environment and facilitating the progression of cancer cells to blood vessels which will bring them to distant organs. We know that ovarian cancer responds well to the initial treatment of chemotherapy but tends to recur rapidly. We intend to provide green tea with higher concentrations of catechins to women with complete remission of their ovarian cancer in an attempt to delay cancer relapse. We also intend to identify, with molecular technologies, the proteases involved in ovarian cancer recurrence and response to catechins. Our objective is to test the hypothesis that green tea intake may delay ovarian cancer recurrence and to develop tools to predict which women will best benefit of the addition of green tea to their initial treatment.
Study Started
Jun 30
2008
Primary Completion
Jun 30
2013
Study Completion
Jun 30
2013
Last Update
Oct 24
2013
Estimate

Dietary Supplement Double-Brewed Green Tea

liquid, 4 celsius; 500 mL ID, 3 hours after meals and 1 hour before next meal; duration: to the first of the following events: 18 months or relapse

  • Other names: DBGT

1 Experimental

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

patients with ovarian serous carcinoma FIGO stage III or IV
patients showing complete response after oncological surgery and chemotherapy (paclitaxel-carboplatin, minimum 5 cycles, maximum 8 cycles), complete response being defined as 1) a negative complete physical examination 2) Serum CA-125 levels inferior to 35 U/mL 3) no evidence of diseased assessed by abdomino-perineal CT-scan
patients refraining from drinking tea other than provided by the study
patients who may absorb liquids orally
patients without any other malignancy (except for non-melanoma skin cancer)
patients not involved in an other study
patients who signed up informed consent form.

Exclusion Criteria:

exclusion criteria are implicit from inclusion criteria.
No Results Posted