Epigenetic Therapy Promotes the Ratio of Th1/Th17 Lineage to Reverse Immune Evasion and Treat Leukemia Relapse Post-allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation in Non-APL AML Patients.
Xi. Yang Y; Jingying. Dai D; Chenglong. Li L; Hong. Zheng Z; Rong. Zhang Z; Xiaodong. Wang W; Chunsen. Wang W; Xiaobing. Huang H
Key Findings
- All 24 AML patients responded to the epigenetic regimen with thymosin‑alpha‑1, showing reduced disease markers.
- Th1 cells and CD3+CD4‑CD8+ T cells rose while Th17 cells fell, creating a high Th1/Th17 ratio that persisted after treatment stopped.
- Overall survival and relapse‑free survival were both 79.2% at the study’s end, with only reversible grade‑2 thrombocytopenia as a notable side effect.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the main takeaway is that thymosin‑alpha‑1 can modulate the Th1/Th17 balance, but the dosing and safety data come from a cancer‑patient setting and aren’t ready for self‑use. It’s not a ready‑to‑apply longevity or performance supplement without further research.
Summary
The study gave leukemia patients a mix of two epigenetic drugs and the peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1 and found it was safe and helped many patients’ cancers go into remission, while also shifting their immune cells toward a Th1‑dominant profile. However, this was done in very sick patients after a stem‑cell transplant, not in healthy people, so the results don’t translate into a simple at‑home protocol.
Abstract
To reverse the early-stage relapse post-hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, we investigated the safety and efficacy of a new epigenetic regimen (chidamide and decitabine plus thymalfasin simultaneously) on acute myeloid leukemia patients (excluding acute promyelocytic leukemia). Twenty-four patients were enrolled in this observational study during April 2015 to May 2018. The most common adverse event was reversible CTCAE grade 2 thrombocytopenia (20/24). Strikingly, all 24 patients had response to this epigenetic regimen accompanied with decreased measurable residual disease. The overall survival rate is 79.2% (19/24), with a relapse-free survival rate of 79.2% (19/24). During this regimen treatment, Th1 cells and CD3+CD4-CD8+T cells increased, and Th17 cells decreased gradually. The status of high Th1 and low Th17 cells was still observed on the 3rd month after discontinuation of this regimen. Interestingly, the significantly elevated ratio of Th1/Th17 seemed to reflect the treatment-related immune effect, which may be a valuable marker to be monitored in the early-relapse stage for evaluating the efficacy and prognosis.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-08-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.3389/fmolb.2020.595395
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