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Thymosin-alpha-1

Thymalfasin, Zadaxin, Thymosin α1

Quick Stats
Studies 759
Trials 63
Score 2
1983 pubmed

Leukocyte subset analysis and related immunological findings in acquired immunodeficiency disease syndrome (AIDS) and malignancies.

Hersh. E M EM; Mansell. P W PW; Reuben. J M JM; Rios. A A; Newell. G R GR; Goldstein. A L AL; Lynch. K K

Key Findings

  • AIDS patients often show an inverted CD4/CD8 (helper:suppressor) ratio due to low T‑helper cells.
  • Serum thymosin‑alpha‑1 and lysozyme levels are elevated in these AIDS patients.
  • Around 30% of patients with solid tumors or leukemias also have an inverted helper:suppressor ratio, while a few have a high ratio (>3.0).

Practical Outcomes

  • The findings suggest thymosin‑alpha‑1 is a marker of immune dysregulation rather than a proven therapeutic. For biohackers, there’s no clear protocol for using thymosin‑alpha‑1 to improve immunity or performance, and more research is needed before considering supplementation.

Summary

The study measured immune cell ratios and blood levels of thymosin‑alpha‑1 in AIDS patients and people with various cancers. It found that most AIDS patients have a low helper‑to‑suppressor (CD4/CD8) ratio and higher thymosin‑alpha‑1, and that a similar inverted ratio appears in about a third of cancer patients. However, the research is observational and doesn’t test any treatments, so it offers limited direct guidance for self‑experiments.

Abstract

Cell surface marker analyses conducted on human peripheral blood lymphoid cells have proven extremely useful in the diagnosis of immunodeficiency and the diagnosis and staging of malignancies. In this paper we have focused on the ratio of helper to suppressor cells in patients with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome and in patients with malignancy. In thirty-three patients with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome, the majority showed an inverted helper:suppressor ratio, elevated serum thymosin alpha 1, and elevated serum lysozyme levels. The inverted ratio was due to a deficiency in T-helper cells. The inverted helper:suppressor ratio was associated with functional suppressor cell activity that was seen in 12 out of 21 patients examined. Patients' lymphocytes were found to suppress the PHA, pokeweed mitogen, and concanavalin-A responses of normal subjects' lymphocytes. The suppression also correlated with impaired lymphocyte proliferative responses among the patients' cells themselves. Because of these findings, the helper:suppressor ratio was studied in patients with solid tumors, lymphoma, acute leukemia, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, and hairy cell leukemia. Approximately 30% of these patients have an inverted helper:suppressor ratio. However, in ten out of 30 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia and in three out of 45 patients with lymphoma, the helper:suppressor ratio was elevated, being greater than 3.0. The significance of these findings is as yet to be explored, but it is suggested that an inverted helper:suppressor ratio in patients with malignancy may relate to an advanced stage of disease or a poor prognosis. Documentation of this point will require further study.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

1983