A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of the Clinical Use of Megestrol Acetate for Cancer-Related Anorexia/Cachexia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.3. Data Abstraction
2.4. Statistical Analysis
2.5. Risk of Bias Assessment
3. Results
3.1. Retrieval of Studies
3.2. Meta-Analysis of Pooled Mean Change in Weight
3.3. Risk of Bias Assessment
3.4. Publication Bias Assessment
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author/Year | Country | Study Design (N) | Study Population | Intervention(s) | Primary and Secondary Endpoints | Key Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abrams et al., 1999 [20] | United States | Randomized, controlled trial (n= 368) | Females only; age ≥18 years; histologically documented breast cancer and progressive metastatic; prior usage of progestins not allowed; chemotherapy for metastatic disease not allowed. | MA 160 mg/day, or 800 mg/day or 1600 mg/day | Response rate; response duration; time to disease progression; weight gain; overall survival | Weight gain: MA 160 mg/day = 37% of patients reported a 5% weight gain and 2% of patients reported a 20% weight gain; MA 800 mg/day = 70% of patients reported a 5% weight gain and 23% of patients reported a 20% weight gain; MA 1600 mg/day = 66% of patients reported a 5% weight gain and 20% of patients reported a 20% weight gain. Overall survival: Increased MA dose did not affect survival duration. Side effects: Serious (grades 4 and 5) thrombotic events increased with MA dose: MA 160 mg/day = 4; MA 800 mg/day = 3; MA 1600 mg/day = 6. |
Beller et al., 1997 [21] | Australia | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (n = 240) | Endocrine-insensitive cancer; body weight at least 5% below ideal or unintentional loss of at least 5% usual body weight. | MA 160 mg/day or 480 mg/day, or placebo | Quality of life measures; nutritional status (weight, mid-arm circumference, triceps skinfold thickness, serum albumin); survival time | Weight gain: No significant difference in weight change between treatment groups (p = 0.29); placebo −0.15 kg; MA 160 mg/day −0.66 kg; MA 480 mg/day +0.15 kg. Quality of life: Combined quality of life measures showed a significant improvement in the MA 480 mg/day group (p < 0.001). No evidence of a time effect. Patients who received MA reported substantially better appetite (p = 0.001), mood (p = 0.001), and overall quality of life (p < 0.001), and possibly less nausea and vomiting (p = 0.08) compared to the patients receiving the placebo. Side effects: 2 (2.5%) in the 160 mg/day group had pulmonary emboli; 4 (5%) in the 160 mg/day group had severe edema. |
Chao et al., 1997 [22] | Taiwan | Open phase II trial (n = 46) | Pathologically confirmed inoperable or metastatic HCC. | MA 160 mg/day | Clinical benefit; survival; weight gain; quality of life | Weight gain: 14 of 22 (63.6%) patients had an increase in lead body weight; median increase of 5 kg, range 1 to 14 kg (mean 6.25, SD 3.8066). Clinical benefit: 13 patients had an increase in serum albumin (median 0.3 g/dL, range 0.1 to 1 g/dL). Quality of life: 20 of 32 (62.5%) patients reported improvements in appetite and feeling of well-being. Side effects: 1 patient had mild congestive cardiac failure (3.13%), 1 hyperglycemia (3.13%) and 9 had mild edema (28.1%). |
Chow et al., 2011 [23] | Myanmar, New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Vietnam | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (n = 204) | Patients with advanced HCC. | Placebo or MA 320 mg/day | Survival; quality of life; side effects | Quality of life: Placebo had more favorable quality of life although MA had favorable improvements in levels of appetite loss and nausea/vomiting episodes. Side effects: Similar between groups. |
Collichio et al., 1998 [24] | United States | Open phase II trial (n= 15) | Patients with renal cell carcinoma; Eastern cooperative oncology group performance status of ≤2. | Interferon alpha-2b, 10 million IU/m2 and MA 160 mg/day | Clinical benefit; weight gain; side effects | Weight gain: 7 of 11 patients lost weight. Side effects: 12 patients (80%) had fatigue, 9 (60%) had flu-like symptoms and 3 (20%) had nausea/vomiting. |
Couluris et al., 2008 [25] | United States | Open clinical trial (n = 6) | Pediatric patients (between ages 2 and 20 years), with diagnosis of cachexia secondary to cancer or cancer treatment; exhibited no response to Cyproheptadine hydrochloride (CH). | CH at 0.25 mg/kg/d orally in 2 divided doses, and MA 10 mg/kg/d in a single daily oral dose | Clinical benefit; weight gain; side effects | Weight gain: The average weight gain was 2.5 kg (range: 0.6 to 5.9 kg). Side effects: 1 patient (16.7%) had asymptomatic hypocortisolemia and hyperlipidemia. |
Currow et al., 2021 [17] | Australia | Randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled trial (n = 190) | Patients with advanced cancer and known to a palliative care team; were mentally competent; able to take oral medications; had a baseline appetite score of ≤4 on a 0–10 numeric rating scale (where 0 is no appetite and 10 is best possible appetite); and an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) score of 0–3; or Australia-modified Karnofsky performance status (AKPS) score of 30–100. | MA 480 mg/day, or dexamethasone 4 mg/day, or Placebo | Quality of life scores; weight, appetite scores, AKPS; side effects | Weight: There were no differences in weight stability between groups (p = 0.2417). MA = 87% responded; Dex = 74% responded; Placebo = 85% responded. Quality of life: 79.3% (n = 48) of participants in the megestrol group, 65.5% (n = 44) in the dexamethasone group and 58.5% (n = 36) in the placebo group had at least 25% improvement of appetite score. No significant difference between treatment arms including quality of life. Side effects: Generally well-tolerated. |
Cuvelier et al., 2014 [26] | Canada | Randomized, controlled trial (n = 26) | Patients <18 years; cancer diagnosis; weight loss secondary to cancer or cancer treatment (must have lost ≥5% body weight from previous recorded weight or have history of anorexia); able to tolerate orally and have life expectancy of at least 3 months. | MA suspension (7.5 mg/kg/day, maximum 800 mg/day), or placebo | Nutritional status (weight, height, mid upper arm circumference, triceps skin fold thickness, body composition analysis); blood glucose levels; 8am cortisol levels | Weight gain: MA group experienced 19.7% ± 15.3% weight gain, while placebo group had −1.2% ± 4.9% weight change. Statistically significant difference in mean percent weight change of +20.9% in favor of MA over placebo was observed (p = 0.003). Nutritional values: Patients in the MA group experienced an increase in mean weight-for-age z-score (WAZ) of +1.00% (±0.79%). Patients in the placebo group experienced a decrease in mean WAZ of −0.18% (±0.34%). Statistically significant difference in mean WAZ of +1.18% in favor of MA over placebo was observed (p = 0.002). BMI-for-age z-scores were higher in the MA group. Patients in the MA group experienced an increase in mean BMI-Z of +1.58% (±1.37%), while patients in the placebo group experienced a decrease in mean BMI-Z of −0.29% (±0.50%). Side effects: severe (15%, n = 2) and mild (15.4%, n = 2) adrenal suppression in the MA group. |
Greig et al., 2014 [27] | United Kingdom | Open phase I/II trial (n = 13) | Adult patients with advanced cancer and cachexia | Formoterol 80 μg/day and MA 480 mg/day | Muscle response; body weight; physical activity; quality of life measures; side effects | Weight gain: 5 out of 7 patients increased their total body weight, with study’s overall mean total body weight increased by 2.6% from 58.7 kg at baseline to 60.2 kg at 8 weeks (p = 0.379). Clinical benefit: 6 had major muscle response (magnitude of strength or muscle size improvement). Quality of Life: QLQ-C30 questionnaire was unchanged, functional domains all showed a small, non-significant increase. For anorexia, the improvement in symptoms was marked (p = 0.005). Side Effects: Most common being tremor (8 reports in 7 patients), tachycardia. 4 discontinued, possibly related to side effect. |
Guo et al., 2002 [28] | China | Randomized control trial (n = 92) | Patients with stage IIIb–IV non-small cell lung cancer, judged to be endurable ≥3 cycles of chemotherapy, no other significant comorbidities, Karnosfsky ≥50, with life expectancy ≥3 months. | IV Arsenous acid and IV Tα-1 thymus peptide and MA 160 mg/day, or chemotherapy in NP protocol (Navelbine and Cisplatin) | Tumor response; Karnofsky score; body weight; T cell subset and NK cell activity; side effects | Weight gain: 33% of treatment group gained >7% body weight, as compared to 12.5% of control group (p <0.05). Clinical benefit: 44% of treatment group had Karnofsky score increased by ≥20 as compared to 20% of control group (p < 0.05). Showed no significant difference in tumor therapeutic response or survival rate. Side Effects: Treatment group had higher reported rates of aversion to cold, fever, pantalgia, and stuffy nose compared to control group. |
Jatoi et al., 2002 [29] | USA | Randomized, double blind, controlled trial (n = 469) | Adult patients with incurable malignancy (excluding brain, breast, ovarian, endometrial) with estimated life expectancy ≥3 months, ECOG score 0–2, and prior weight loss of at least 2.3 kg or intake <20 calories/kg/day, and a belief that they have anorexia or weight loss. | MA 800 mg/day and placebo, or Dronabinol 5 mg/day and placebo, or combination of MA and Dronabinol | Improvement of appetite; weight gain; quality of life | Weight gain: MA group have showed that there’s significant difference in weight gain (23% have 1–4% weight gain, 10% have 5–9% gain, 10% have ≥10% gain) as compared to the Dronabinol group (23% have 1–4% gain, 8% have 5–9% gain, 3% have ≥10% gain) (p = 0.041). Quality of Life: 75% of the MA group, as compared to 49% of the Dronabinol group (p = 0.0001) reported improvement in appetite. Among all 3 study arms, there are no significant differences between the maximal score improvement of QoL Uniscale assessment (MA: 15 ± 19, Dronabinol: 12 ± 8 [p = 0.19], Combination 14 ± 19 [p = 0.72]). For FAACT scores, the MA group (10.3 ± 11) showed that there was significant difference between baseline and maximum score compared to Dronabinol group (7.2 ± 10, p = 0.002), but no significant difference compared to combination group (9 ± 10, p = 0.30). Side Effects: 18% of the male participants in MA group reported significant presence of impotence as compared to 4% with Dronabinol (p = 0.002). Other noted side effects that were not significant compared to other treatment arms included vomiting, fluid retention, muddled thinking, drowsiness, loss of coordination, and inappropriate behavior. |
Jatoi et al., 2004 [30] | USA + Canada | Randomized, double blind, controlled trial (n = 421) | Adult patients with incurable malignancy (excluding brain, breast, ovarian, endometrial) with estimated life expectancy ≥3 months, ECOG score 0–2, and prior weight loss of at least 2.3 kg or intake <20 calories/kg/day, and a belief that they have anorexia or weight loss. | MA 600 mg/day and placebo, or eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) supplement 2 cans/day and placebo, or combination of both MA and EPA | 10% weight gain above baseline, improvement in appetite, survival, quality of life, side effects | Weight gain: 18% of the MA group showed >10% gain as compared to 6% of EPA group and 11% of combination group (p = 0.01). Separate analysis in mean weight changes showed significant changes across all arms (p = 0.03), where mean weight gain of MA is 1.3 kg, EPA is 1.0 kg, and combination is 0.1 kg. Clinical benefit: No statistically significant differences in median survival (p = 0.82) across all 3 groups. Quality of life: Appetite measured using NCCTG was comparable across all treatment arms, all with favorable effects–EPA: 64%, MA: 68%, Combination: 66% (p = 0.69). In terms of quality of life assessment based on difference of maximal and baseline Uniscale score, it showed no significant differences across all groups–median changes 0 in EPA, 0 in MA, 1 in combination (p = 0.93). Side effects: Apart from impotence in 9% of MA group, 3% of EPA group, 19% in combination group (p = 0.006), other side effects including nausea, vomiting, confusion, swelling of legs, and thromboembolism were not significantly different. |
Levitan et al., 1998 [31] | USA | Phase II trial (n = 30) | Adult patients with stage IIIB or IV NSCLC, deemed inoperable, with no prior cytotoxic chemotherapy, ECOG status of 0–1, and life expectancy of ≥12 weeks, no serious comorbidities that would interfere chemotherapy. | Cisplatin 50 mg/m2, Ifosfamide 2 g/m2, Mesna, 7-day course oral etoposide on days 1, 15, 29, 43, and 57, followed by 7-day filgrastim after each course of etoposide, along with MA 250 mg/daily throughout duration of 10 week therapy | Weight change, clinical response, survival, toxicity | Weight change: Paired comparisons of pre- and post-treatment weights show no difference. |
Loprinzi et al., 1999 [32] | USA | Randomized, controlled trial (n = 475) | Patients with incurable cancer (other than breast, prostate, ovarian, endometrial), with a history of losing at least 5 pounds within the previous 2 months or have an estimated daily caloric intake of <20 cal/kg, expected life expectancy of at least 3 months and ECOG performance of at least 2, no evidence of ascites, obstructive or functional alimentary tract issues, not receiving supplementary feeds. | MA 800 mg/day, or Fluoxymesterone 20 mg/day, or Dexamethasone 3 mg/day | Weight gain, appetite improvement, side effects | Weight gain: Weight gain of >10% from baseline was greater for MA compared to fluoxymesterone. (p = 0.08) No difference in MA vs. dexamethasone (p = 0.42). No difference in all 3 arms when comparing median and mean maximal weight gain from baseline. Quality of life: MA is found to have a significant increase in appetite when compared to fluoxymesterone, and similar efficacy when compared to dexamethasone. Average maximum, quality of life values per patient were 67, 71, 69 for MA, dexamethasone, and fluoxymesterone, with no statistical significance. Side Effects: Commonly includes myopathy, infection, and thromboembolic disease. Thromboembolic phenomenon was present in 5%, 2%, and 1% of MA, fluoxymesterone, dexamethasone treatment arms, respectively. |
Maddedu et al., 2012 [33] | Italy | Phase III, randomized controlled trial (n = 60) | Patients (aged 18–85 years) with advanced stage tumor at any site, loss of ≥5% of ideal or pre-illness body weight in the last 6 months and a life expectancy of ≥4 months. | L-carnitine 4 g/day and Celecoxib 300 mg/day, or L-carnitine 4 g/day and celecoxib 300 mg/day and megestrol acetate 320 mg/day | Increase in Lean Body Mass (LBM), improvement of total daily physical activity, physical performance, fatigue, resting energy expenditure, ECOG status, Glasgow prognostic score, proinflammatory cytokines, appetite, quality of life | Weight gain: Lean body mass has no significant differences between the two arms. MA arm showed a trend towards increase in body weight (p = 0.052) Clinical benefit: Changes in total daily physical activity, 6 min walk test, and grip strength between arms were not significant. Quality of life: No significant differences in both individual arms from baseline, and no significant difference between both arms either. Side effects: Generally well-tolerated. |
Mantovani et al., 2008 [34] | Italy | Phase III, randomized, controlled trial (n = 125) | Patients (aged 18 to 80 years) with malignancy of any site at an advanced stage; loss of 5% of the ideal or pre-illness body weight in the previous 3 months, abnormal values of proinflammatory cytokines, ROS and antioxidant enzymes predictive of the onset of clinical cachexia; and life expectancy of 4 months. | Medroxy-progesterone acetate (MPA) 500 mg/d or MA 320 g/d given orally as one treatment arm, or eicosapentaenoicacid (EPA) nutrition supplement 2.2 g/d, or L-carnitine at 4 g/d, or Thalidomide at 200 md/d, or MPA/MA + pharmacologic nutritional support + L-carnitine + Thalidomide | Lean body mass, phase angle, REE, daily physical activity and its associated energy expenditure, proinflammatory cytokines, fatigue, clinical response, progression-free survival, performance status, appetite, grip strength, blood levels of ROS, quality of life | Weight gain: Single agents were generally ineffective or mildly effective. More effective when combined (lean body mass one-way ANOVA was 1.080 ± 3.094 kg in arm 5). Quality of life: Significant increases in appetite (p = 0.003) and EQ-5DVAS score (p = 0.03) and an improvement in ECOG PS score (p = 0.03) in arm 1 (MPA or MA). Multidimensional Fatigue Symptom Inventory–Short Form, MFSI-SF (score) −2.444 ± 7.205 in arm 1. Side effects: Toxicity negligible and was comparable among treatment arms. Only two patients with grade 3 or 4 diarrhea were reported in arm 3 (L-carnitine) and arm 5 (MPA or MA plus EPA plus L-carnitine plus thalidomide). Overall good patient compliance. |
McMillan et al., 1994 [35] | UK | Randomized, controlled trial (n = 26) | Patients with gastrointestinal cancer and documented weight loss of >5%, undergoing palliative therapy, life expectancy of >2 months, no surgery/RT/chemo within 2 months, no physical or functional obstruction to intake. | MA 480 mg/day, or Placebo | Weight gain, total body water, total body potassium, biochemistry and hematological parameters | Weight gain: No significant difference in weight gain. |
McMillan et al., 1999 [36] | UK | Prospective, randomized, controlled trial (n = 73) | Patients with advanced or metastatic gastrointestinal cancer and documented weight loss of >5%, undergoing palliative therapy, life expectancy of >2 months, no surgery/RT/chemo within 2 months, no physical or functional obstruction to intake. | MA 480 mg/day and Ibuprofen 1200 mg/day, or MA 480 mg and placebo | Weight gain, appetite, anthropometry measurements, Karnofsky performance score, quality of life, biochemical results | Weight gain: After 12 weeks of treatment, there was a significant difference between the median weight gain (2.3 kg) in the megestrol acetate/ibuprofen group compared with median weight loss (−2.8 kg) in the megestrol acetate/placebo group (p <0.001). Accompanied by a significant decrease in the mid-upper arm circumference of the megestrol acetate/placebo group (p < 0.05). Quality of life: No significant difference in appetite changes. Significant improvement in the EuroQol-EQ-5D quality of life score of the MA/ibuprofen group (p < 0.05). Side Effects: Generally well tolerated, 3 incidents of venous thrombosis across entire study. |
Navari et al., 2010 [37] | USA | Randomized, controlled trial (n = 80) | Patients >18 years with stage III or IV gastrointestinal or lung cancer, with weight loss >5% pre-illness, no gastrointestinal obstruction, and no major surgery, chemotherapy, or radiotherapy in the last 4 weeks. | MA 800 mg/day, or MA 800 mg/day and Olanzapine 5 mg/day | Weight gain >5%, appetite, nausea, quality of life | Weight gain: 15 patients on MA only gained >5% weight as compared to 33 patients on MA and Olanzapine. Quality of life: 2 patients on MA as compared to 25 patients on MA and Olanzapine felt that appetite improved (+3 in the visual analog scale). 5 patients on MA felt an improvement in QoL as compared to 23 patients on MA and Olanzapine. Side effects: Generally well tolerated. |
Nelson et al., 2002 [38] | USA | Phase II Trial (n = 20) | Patients with anorexia due to advanced cancer excluding breast or prostate cancer and weight loss, ECOG PS 3 and below, no hormonal or chemotherapy currently. | MA 160 mg/day | Appetite, side effects, satisfaction on taking MA | Appetite: 15 patients reported improvement in appetite. 16 patients were satisfied with the way the medication affected their appetite. Side effects: Generally well tolerated, 1 case of DVT attributed to worsening disease rather than medication. |
Rowland et al., 1996 [39] | USA | Double blinded, randomized, controlled trial (n = 243) | Patients with extensive small-cell lung cancer outside the chest or intrathoracic disease that could not be encompassed in a safe radiation treatment, ECOG 0–2, no uncontrolled infection or prior chemotherapy/RT. | Cisplatin 30 mg/m2/day, etoposide 130 mg/m2/day and, MA 800 mg/day or placebo | Benefits of MA including weight change, anorexia, n/v, Clinical response, quality of life, side effects | Weight gain: Weight gain of ≥10% occurred in 21% of patients in the MA group, versus only 7% in the placebo group (p = 0.004). Clinical benefit: MA associated with less nausea and vomiting compared to placebo. Quality of life: Minimal change in QoL and no difference over 8-month study period between the two groups. Side effects: Commonly includes oedema, phlebitis, thrombocytopenia and neutropenia. Grade 3/4 thromboembolic phenomenon occurred in 11 MA patients and 2 placebo patients. |
Tanca et al., 2009 [40] | Italy | Phase III, randomized, controlled trial (n = 475) | Patients 18–80 y/o with advanced tumor at any site, loss of >5% ideal/pre-illness body weight in past 3 months, or abnormal values of proinflammatory cytokines, ROS and antioxidant enzymes predictive of the onset of clinical cachexia, life expectancy > 4 months, could be receiving concomitant chemotherapy, no significant comorbidities, no obstructive changes to body weight, no history of VTE. | A: Medroxy- progesterone 500 mg/day or MA 160 mg/BD B: Eicosapentaenoic acid with oral supplement C: L-carnitine 4 g/day D: Thalidomide 100 mg/day E: A + B + C + D | Lean body mass, resting energy expenditure, daily physical activities, IL-6 and TNF-a levels, fatigue, side effects | Lean body mass/Weight gain: LBM evaluated by DEXA showed a significant improvement only in arm 5 (p < 0.05), whilst the assessment of LBM by bioimpedentiometry did not show a significant difference in any arm of treatment. Quality of life: Patients in arm 5 showed a significant decrease of fatigue assessed by MFSI-SF (p = 0.017). Side effects: No toxicity of any grade was observed. Only one patient in arm 1, discontinued MPA because of DVT. |
Wen et al., 2012 [41] | China | Randomized, controlled trial (n = 93) | Adult patients excluding women of child bearing age with advanced-stage tumor at any site, weight lost >5% of pre-illness/ideal body weight in past 3 months, life expectancy > 4 months, could be receiving chemotherapy or palliative care, no obstruction to feeding, no treatment significantly affecting weight, no previous VTE. | MA 320 mg/day and thalidomide 100 mg/day, or MA 320 mg/day only | Body weight, fatigue, quality of life, appetite, grip strength, serum levels of IL-6 or TNF-α, side effects | Weight gain: Both groups had significant increase in weight from baseline. Mean weight changes in trial group (with thalidomide) was significantly greater as compared to control group (p = 0.025). Quality of life: QoL and fatigue in trial group significantly improved as compared to the control group (p = 0.01, p < 0.01 respectively. A trend for improvement in appetite (p = 0.117) was found in the trial group as compared with the control group. Side effects: Toxicities included thromboembolism (3 cases), edema, somnolence and constipation at a low occurrence rate. Compliance was good. |
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Lim, Y.L.; Teoh, S.E.; Yaow, C.Y.L.; Lin, D.J.; Masuda, Y.; Han, M.X.; Yeo, W.S.; Ng, Q.X. A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of the Clinical Use of Megestrol Acetate for Cancer-Related Anorexia/Cachexia. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 3756. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11133756
Lim YL, Teoh SE, Yaow CYL, Lin DJ, Masuda Y, Han MX, Yeo WS, Ng QX. A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of the Clinical Use of Megestrol Acetate for Cancer-Related Anorexia/Cachexia. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2022; 11(13):3756. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11133756
Chicago/Turabian StyleLim, Yu Liang, Seth En Teoh, Clyve Yu Leon Yaow, Daryl Jimian Lin, Yoshio Masuda, Ming Xuan Han, Wee Song Yeo, and Qin Xiang Ng. 2022. "A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of the Clinical Use of Megestrol Acetate for Cancer-Related Anorexia/Cachexia" Journal of Clinical Medicine 11, no. 13: 3756. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11133756
APA StyleLim, Y. L., Teoh, S. E., Yaow, C. Y. L., Lin, D. J., Masuda, Y., Han, M. X., Yeo, W. S., & Ng, Q. X. (2022). A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of the Clinical Use of Megestrol Acetate for Cancer-Related Anorexia/Cachexia. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 11(13), 3756. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11133756