The Effects of Chemotherapy on Circulating Plasma Carotenoids and Fat-Soluble Vitamins in Breast Cancer Patients
Bennouna D, Orchard T, Lustberg M, Kopec R. The Effects of Chemotherapy on Circulating Plasma Carotenoids and Fat-Soluble Vitamins in Breast Cancer Patients. Current Developments In Nutrition 2021, 5: 70. PMCID: PMC8180829, DOI: 10.1093/cdn/nzab034_004.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchFat-soluble vitaminsNSAID useMultivitamin useNon-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug useAnti-inflammatory drug useNeo-adjuvant chemotherapyBreast cancer patientsPro-inflammatory cytokinesEffect of chemotherapyFat-soluble vitamin concentrationsBreast cancer chemotherapyMethods Serum samplesFree-living patientsChemotherapy commencementSerum luteinSerum retinolCancer patientsSerum concentrationsChemotherapy treatmentInflammatory processBreast cancerMerit further investigationChemotherapyPlasma carotenoidsDrug useChanges in Serum Fatty Acids and Inflammatory Markers in Postmenopausal Women With Breast Cancer Following Chemotherapy Treatment
Zhang Z, Ormiston K, Schnell P, Kopec R, Lustberg M, Orchard T. Changes in Serum Fatty Acids and Inflammatory Markers in Postmenopausal Women With Breast Cancer Following Chemotherapy Treatment. Current Developments In Nutrition 2021, 5: 5140290. PMCID: PMC8182042, DOI: 10.1093/cdn/nzab036_032.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchSerum fatty acidsInflammatory markersInterleukin-6Breast cancerSerum cytokinesPostmenopausal breast cancer patientsSerum inflammatory markersBreast cancer survivorsBreast cancer patientsFatty acidsMethods Serum samplesTumor necrosis factorTotal monounsaturated FAsTotal monounsaturated fatty acidsEnzyme-linked immunoassaySerum FCytokine changesPostmenopausal womenInflammatory profileCancer survivorsInflammatory stateCancer patientsIL-8Chemotherapy treatmentNecrosis factor