International Journal of Yoga (Jan 2011)

The importance of spirituality in supportive care

  • Giuseppina Messina,
  • Stefania Anania,
  • Claudia Bonomo,
  • Laura Veneroni,
  • Antonietta Andreoli,
  • Francesca Mameli,
  • Chiara Ortolina,
  • Paola De Fabritiis,
  • Maria Gaffuri,
  • Francesco Imbesi,
  • Egidio Moja

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/0973-6131.78181
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 33 – 38

Abstract

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Background: It has been shown that the pineal gland plays a fundamental role in mediating either the spiritual perception or the anticancer immunity by stimulating the endogenous production of anticancer cytokine interleukin (IL)-2. Objective: The present study was performed to evaluate the impact of a spiritual approach consisting of Kriya Yoga program alone or in association with melatonin (MLT) or low-dose IL-2 plus MLT on the survival time in a group of metastatic cancer patients with life expectancy less than 1 year. Materials and Methods: A case-control study was carried out in 240 patients (M/F: 146/94; median age: 62 years, range: 34-71, suffering from non-small-cell lung cancer or gastrointestinal tumors) who were subdivided into 6 groups of 40 patients, treated with supportive care alone as a control group, supportive care plus Yoga, MLT alone, MLT plus Yoga, inteleukin-2 plus MLT, or IL-2 plus MLT plus Yoga. Results: The best results in terms of increased survival time were obtained by the association between neuroimmunotherapy with MLT plus IL-2 and Yoga program (2 years), which was significantly longer with respect to that achieved by supportive care alone, Yoga alone, or IL-2 plus MLT alone (1 year). Conclusions: This study would suggest that a spiritual therapeutic approach may improve the survival time of untreatable metastatic solid tumor patients.

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