Thymosin alpha 1 is associated with improved cellular immunity and reduced infection rate in severe acute pancreatitis patients in a double-blind randomized control study.
Wang. Xinying X; Li. Weiqin W; Niu. Chenglin C; Pan. Liya L; Li. Ning N; Li. Jieshou J
Key Findings
- Thymosin‑alpha‑1 accelerated recovery of monocyte HLA‑DR expression
- Infection rates (blood and abdominal cultures) were lower in the peptide group
- ICU stay was shorter for patients receiving thymosin‑alpha‑1
Practical Outcomes
- The study suggests thymosin‑alpha‑1 can boost cellular immunity during acute severe illness, but the evidence is limited to severe pancreatitis patients. Biohackers should view this as early, disease‑specific data rather than a ready‑to‑use protocol for healthy individuals; more research is needed before applying it for general immune enhancement.
Summary
In a small study of 24 people with severe pancreas inflammation, giving the peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1 (3.2 mg twice daily for a week) helped their immune cells recover faster, cut infection rates, and shortened time in the ICU. The results are promising for immune support in very sick patients, but the data are limited to a specific disease and a short treatment course.
Abstract
The aim of this prospective, double-blinded pilot trial study was to evaluate the effects of Thymosin alpha 1 use in the early phase on immunomodulation and clinical outcomes in patients with severe acute pancreatitis (SAP). A total of 24 patients with SAP were randomized to receive either conventional therapy for SAP or immunomodulatory therapy (TA1 group). The patients in the thymosin group were injected with Talpha1 3.2 mg twice per day for 7 days. The serum level of HLA-DR and CD4/CD8 ratio and other immune parameters were measured on admission, the 8th day and the 28th day. There was a low expression of monocyte HLA-DR in both groups on admission, and more rapid alterations in the HLA-DR were found in the TA1 group. The positive rates of blood and abdominal drainage culture were statistically significant during the 28th follow-up period. The duration of ICU stay was shorter after TA1 treatment. Improves cell-induced immunity and reduces infection rate in severe acute pancreatitis patients.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-04-02T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s10753-010-9224-1
25
23