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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 2
2000 pubmed

Thymosin alpha(1) application augments immune response and down-regulates tumor weight and organ colonization in BALB/c-mice.

Beuth. J J; Schierholz. J M JM; Mayer. G G

Key Findings

  • Daily sub‑cutaneous thymosin‑alpha‑1 (0.01‑10 µg per mouse) increased thymocyte and peripheral blood cell counts in tumor‑bearing mice
  • A 7‑day treatment started 24 h after cancer cell injection reduced liver and lung metastases in mice
  • The same regimen also reduced the size of locally injected sarcoma tumors

Practical Outcomes

  • The results suggest thymosin‑alpha‑1 can stimulate immune cells and may have anti‑cancer effects, but the evidence is limited to mice. For biohackers, this is not a ready‑to‑use protocol; human dosing, safety, and efficacy are unknown, so any self‑experimentation would be speculative and should be approached with caution.

Summary

In mice, giving thymosin‑alpha‑1 under the skin for a week boosted immune cell numbers and cut down the spread and growth of injected cancer cells in the liver, lungs, and under the skin. The study shows the peptide can enhance the immune system and slow tumor growth, but it’s only animal data and the doses used are far from what humans would take.

Abstract

The immunomodulatory and antimetastatic/antitumor activity of thymosin alpha(1) (Talpha(1)) was evaluated in BALB/c-mice. Daily subcutaneous application (7 consecutive days, 0.01-10 microg of Talpha(1)/injection per mouse) upregulated the number of thymocytes and peripheral blood cells in tumor bearing mice. To check the influence of Talpha(1) treatment on growth of experimental metastases, RAW H10 lymphosarcoma cells or L-1 sarcoma cells were intravenously injected into BALB/c-mice to establish liver or lung metastases. Local tumor growth was induced by subcutaneous injection of L-1 sarcoma cells. Talpha(1) was subcutaneously administered daily for 7 consecutive days starting 24 h after tumor cell challenge. Organ colonization, as well as local tumor growth, were investigated on day 14 after tumor cell inoculation, and demonstrated a statistically significant (P<0.05) reduction of experimental liver and lung metastases and local tumor growth for Talpha(1) treated mice.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2000

Date

2000-10-16T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/s0304-3835(00)00510-3