Veritas Health Nutrition Therapy Extends Survival by 34% in Stage 4 Pancreatic Cancer Patients, New Clinical Trial Shows

The Verta Nutritional Intervention was shown in a randomized, controlled phase II clinical trial to improve survival outcomes in patients with one of the most lethal cancers.

Denver, March 12, 2026–( BUSINESS WIRE )– Verta Health, a leader in metabolic disease prevention, today announced the results of a randomized, controlled phase II clinical trial (RCT), providing an early signal that could change how advanced pancreatic cancer is treated. Conducted in partnership with USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, Mayo Clinic, HonorHealth Research Institute, and others, the research was peer-reviewed and published. cancershows that Verta’s medically supervised, individualized nutritional therapy — long proven effective in preventing metabolic diseases such as type 2 diabetes and obesity — also shows promise in extending survival in patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer when used with chemotherapy.

The trial enrolled patients with stage IV metastatic pancreatic cancer, where the average life expectancy is 6 to 12 months. All participants received a triple chemotherapy regimen—gemcitabine, nab-paclitaxel, and cisplatin—and were randomized to Verta Nutrition therapy or the standard regimen. Patients in the Verta arm lived 34% longer than patients in the control arm (average 13.7 vs. 10.2 months), and progression-free survival improved by 37% (average 8.5 vs. 6.2 months). The trial met its objective, demonstrating a trend toward improvement in feasibility and progression-free survival—all without any toxicity or reduction in quality of life—on Verta.

“Pancreatic cancer is one of the deadliest cancers, and universally improving outcomes are rare,” said Adam Wolfberg, MD, MPH, and chief medical officer of Verta. “To see a nutritional intervention—delivered remotely and safely—have this level of impact is extraordinary.”

In a field where decades of drug development have yielded only incremental gains, this trial marks a rare and promising exception. Verta’s intervention showed a promising trend toward life extension without increasing side effects—little, if any, that current lifestyle approaches can claim.

“The mechanism of action is not fully understood, but this method of nutrition has been shown in clinical work to improve the effect of anti-cancer treatment, and it was shown in this clinical trial,” said Erkut Borazansi, MD, director of the HonorHealth Research Institute’s Oncology Research Department, and one of the lead authors of the study paper.

Dr Borzansi said the researchers hope to confirm their findings in a larger study.

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