e17540 Background: Cancer cachexia affects about 250,000 patients in the US worsening treatment outcome and quality of life. To evaluate the scholar contribution to cancer cachexia, we analyzed the cachexia literature and funding support. Methods: In May 2008, we conducted a search of the major databases Medline, Web of Sciences, and Scopus of all publications with MeSH heading “cachexia” or keywords “cachexia, cachectic, cachexic” since 1982, distinguishing “original research” from “review” articles. To examine the trend over time, we compared the publication rate in the field of cachexia to that of published manuscripts in reference fields (cancer, AIDS, Alzheimer's disease, and CHF). To study the federal funding for cachexia research, we examined the Computer Retrieval of Information on Scientific Projects database. Only descriptive statistical analysis was adopted because of the heterogeneity of methods. Results: We identified 1990 published manuscripts, 677 (34%) of which are “reviews”. Out of the 2,890 country of origin affiliations, the US is the lead contributor (N = 1,105; 38%). In the last 5 years, the ratio of “review” articles in cachexia increased significantly (49%), compared to cancer (17%), and science publications (8%). Unlike the of publications in reference fields, the increase in cachexia has been mostly due to the dominance of “review” articles (ratio of original/review of 0.928 in cachexia, versus 0.417 in CHF, 0.337 in Alzheimer and 0.206 in AIDS). Nevertheless, published cachexia articles in journals with high impact factors (IF ≥ 4.0) remains similar (8.49%) to that of science research (8.63%) with a predominance of “review’ articles. Only one in four published manuscripts (24%) acknowledged federal support. Cachexia research support by US federal agencies declined significantly in the last decade (with a peak of 161 awards in 1999 down to 40 in 2006), the NCI remains the leading funding agency (17%). Only 275 out of the total of 121,997 NCI- awards over 25 years (0.22%) were awarded to cachexia research, with a clear decline in the latest decade by 50% (0.14% vs. 0.29%). Conclusions: Advances in the field of original cancer cachexia research have been very limited, perhaps related to the lack of federal research funding support, which is on the decline. No significant financial relationships to disclose.