Biochemotherapy with thymosin alpha 1, interleukin-2 and dacarbazine in patients with metastatic melanoma: clinical and immunological effects.
Lopez. M M; Carpano. S S; Cavaliere. R R; Di Lauro. L L; Ameglio. F F; Vitelli. G G; Frasca. A M AM; Vici. P P; Pignatti. F F; Rosselli. M M
Key Findings
- Combination of DTIC, TA1, and IL‑2 gave a 36% objective response in metastatic melanoma patients
- Side effects were mainly from IL‑2, but overall toxicity was manageable
- Lower baseline sCD4 and higher sCD8 levels were linked to better outcomes
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, this protocol isn’t practical or safe to try outside a clinical setting. The data suggest TA1 may boost immune responses when paired with other strong agents, but using it alone for longevity or performance lacks evidence.
Summary
The study tested thymosin‑alpha‑1 together with chemotherapy (DTIC) and interleukin‑2 in patients with advanced melanoma and found a modest response rate, but the regimen is complex, uses high‑dose drugs, and is aimed at cancer treatment, not general health or performance enhancement.
Abstract
DTIC and interleukin-2 (IL-2), as single agents, have a limited anti-tumor activity in patients with metastatic melanoma. Experimentally, thymosin alpha 1 (TA1) may modulate the action of IL-2. We investigated the clinical and immunological effects of a combination with these three agents. Forty-six patients with measurable metastatic melanoma were treated with DTIC 850 mg IV on day 1, TA1 2 mg s.c. on days 4 to 7, and IL-2 18 MU/m2/d by continuous intravenous infusion on days 8 to 12. Cycles were repeated every 3 weeks. Objective responses were obtained in 15 (36%) of 42 evaluable patients (CI at 95%: 22%-50%). Two patients experienced complete responses, and stable disease was observed in five. The median time to progression was 5.5 months and median survival was 11 months. Side effects were predominantly caused by IL-2. Treatment was tolerated reasonably well, and there was no overlapping toxicity or interference between chemotherapy and biotherapy. Baseline sCD4 levels seem to correlate to tumor burden. Patients benefiting from treatment had lower sCD4 and higher sCD8 than did progressing patients. The combination of DTIC + TA1 + IL-2 is active in the treatment of advanced melanoma, with acceptable toxicity. However, even more active regimens are needed, and the interactions between thymic hormones and cytokines should be further explored.
Study Information
pubmed
1994
10.1093/oxfordjournals.annonc.a058979