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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 2
1994 pubmed 14 citations

Thymosin alpha-1 as adjunct for conventional therapy of malignant tumors: a review.

Bepler. G G

Key Findings

  • It is well‑tolerated in humans up to 9.6 mg/m² with no major side effects.
  • In small studies it may lengthen time to cancer relapse and improve survival in some patients.
  • The dose‑response is odd – both very low and very high doses showed tumor effects in animals, making optimal dosing uncertain.

Practical Outcomes

  • For now, the peptide is mainly of research interest. It provides safety and dosing reference points, but without solid trial data you shouldn’t add it to a health‑optimization regimen for cancer prevention or treatment.

Summary

Thymosin alpha-1 is a short peptide that seems safe up to fairly high doses and might help keep certain cancers from coming back, but the evidence is still weak and the best dose schedule isn’t clear yet, so it’s not ready for regular use.

Abstract

T alpha 1, a 28-amino-acid peptide, is derived from PT alpha, which is an intracellular, nonsecretory protein of unknown function. Both T alpha 1 and PT alpha are found in the blood of normal individuals. Subcutaneous and intramuscular injections of T alpha 1 in doses up to 9.6 mg/m2 are tolerated without side effects, and 0.9 mg/m2 injections raise the serum level approximately 30-fold after 1 hr of administration, which slowly returns to baseline within 24 hr. In vitro, and perhaps in vivo, T alpha 1 restores normal T-cell function. It increases IL-2 production and IL-2 receptors in normal mitogen-stimulated T cells and stimulates IL-3 production in immunocompromised mice. The dose-response relationship for these effects is not linear and may be bimodal. T alpha 1 binds to VIP receptors and inhibits in vitro and xenograft growth of non-SCLC cell lines. In patients with nonbulky carcinomas who have received standard therapy, T alpha 1 is possibly effective in prolonging the time to relapse and in improving survival. At present there is a great need to clearly define the clinical role of T alpha 1 in cancer patients. A major problem encountered in studies with T alpha 1 will, however, be the present lack of knowledge with regard to its mechanism in effecting tumor growth. It is not at all clear whether its immunomodulatory functions, its interaction with VIP receptors, or none of these mechanisms are related to its antineoplastic activities. In addition, the apparent nonlinear dose-response relationship will make it difficult to choose a reasonable dosing schedule for clinical trials. This is particularly apparent in light of the experimental animal data summarized above where a tumor response was seen at doses of 4 micrograms/kg and 400 micrograms/kg but not at 0.4 microgram/kg and 40 micrograms/kg. This dose range could conceivably be given to humans since 9.6 mg/m2, the maximum dose given to humans without major side effects to date, is roughly equivalent to 250 micrograms/kg. At this time a reasonable clinical approach would be a well-designed risk factor stratified phase III clinical trial using 0.9 mg/m2 T alpha 1 subcutaneously twice a week compared to a control group to substantiate the data reported by Schulof et al. Before such data are available, T alpha 1 should not be used in clinical oncology.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1994

DOI

10.3109/07357909409021409

Citations

14

References

19