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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 3
1985 pubmed

A randomized trial to evaluate the immunorestorative properties of synthetic thymosin-alpha 1 in patients with lung cancer.

Schulof. R S RS; Lloyd. M J MJ; Cleary. P A PA; Palaszynski. S R SR; Mai. D A DA; Cox. J W JW; Alabaster. O O; Goldstein. A L AL

Key Findings

  • Thymosin‑alpha‑1 restored T‑cell function and kept helper T‑cell levels normal in cancer patients after radiotherapy
  • Patients receiving a loading‑dose regimen showed significant immune improvement (p=0.04)
  • Both dosing schedules were associated with longer relapse‑free and overall survival, especially in patients with smaller tumors

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this suggests thymosin‑alpha‑1 might be a useful immune‑boosting supplement after intense stress like radiation, but the evidence is limited to cancer patients and specific dosing regimens. More research is needed before applying it to healthy individuals, and any use should consider the loading‑dose versus twice‑weekly schedule.

Summary

In a small study of lung‑cancer patients who had just finished radiation, giving the synthetic peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1 helped their immune system bounce back faster and was linked to better survival, especially when given in a specific dosing schedule.

Abstract

A randomized trial was performed in 42 postradiotherapy patients with non-small cell lung cancer to determine whether the administration of synthetic thymosin-alpha 1 by either a loading dose or a twice-weekly schedule could accelerate the reconstitution of thymic dependent immunity. The radiotherapy-induced immunosuppression was characterized by an absolute T cell lymphopenia and by impaired T cell function in lymphoproliferative assays. Placebo-treated patients did not show any improvement in T cell numbers or function over 15 weeks of serial immune monitoring, and exhibited gradual depressions of helper T lymphocyte percentages. Patients treated with thymosin by the loading dose regimen exhibited a normalization of T cell function (p = 0.04), whereas patients treated with the twice-weekly schedule maintained normal helper T cell percentages (p = 0.04). Thymosin treatment was associated with significant improvements in relapse-free and overall survival, which was most pronounced for patients with nonbulky tumors. Thymosin-alpha 1 exhibits schedule-dependent immune restorative and homeostatic properties. Large scale Phase III trials are indicated to definitively establish the impact of thymosin therapy in lung cancer patients treated with radiotherapy.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1985