Schneibster
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It's not dichloroethane. It's dichloroacetate.
It's not dichloroethane. It's dichloroacetate.
It's actually called the Warburg Effect. It also interferes with apoptosis, the mechanism by which cancer cells are normally killed off before they can do too much damage; this mechanism is mediated by the mitochondria, which explains why the cell must both shift to this different metabolism, and does not die off.Does anyone know about the supposed mechanism of cancer that this is targeting? I had not heard about cancerous cells not using mitocondria, but the failures being in other areas.
I assume you meant to go on here and say that you were surprised that it should be so. I suspect but do not know for certain that this metabolism shift happens in all malignant cancer; the fact that the chemical is touted as a cheap cure for many if not most cancers argues that it very likely is a feature of many if not most of them.So is this universal to cancers, common in cancers, or a subset of cancers? Given that cancer is a fairly diverse thing(I think, as they are any change in cells that causes them to grow out of control, why assume that they have that much in common)
And there are some risks associated with this stuff too- there is a peripheral nervous system damage risk, and in case you're not familiar with what that means, it can lead to the symptoms of leprosy. So it looks like there is still some work to be done.As for why this isn't being used, well look at when they tried mega-dose betacaratine to prevent lung cancer, it increased the rates. so care is something that it is wise to take.
...snip...
The problem I guess is if it isn't patentable and the drug will be cheap to make, everyone could do it so no one will make any money, so who would put in the hundreds of millions required to go through all the clinical trials?
I think dichloroethane is a better solvent, at least for hydrocarbons and fats, but I doubt dichloroacetate is; OTOH, I would put the LD50 for either of them much lower than the LD50 for dihydrogen monoxide; I would guess you'd need at least a gallon of that. And a bucket. And strong hands.Yes but is it as lethal as dihydrogen monoxide?
Yeah, I hear you- it's a complicated system and there's no telling how something will get caught up in things.This to me is nice in vitro news. But let us remember vitamin C also showed promise in vitro in the 70's, but was useless in vivo.
I'll wait to see what happens when humans take it before getting my hopes up.
The cited article on harmful effects (J Clin Pharmacol. 2006 Dec;46(12):1449-59) pertains to dichloroethane but sometimes calls it "dichloroacetate;" I have no idea why. The article is not relevant to the antitumor compound.It's not dichloroethane. It's dichloroacetate.
Ethyl dichloroacetate (1)
Methyl dichloroacetate (2)
Methyl dichloroacetate solution (1)
Methyl dichloroacetate-1-13C (1)
Potassium dichloroacetate (1)
Sodium dichloroacetate (1)
5-ALPHA-CHOLESTAN-3-BETA-YL DICHLOROACETATE (1)
ANDROST-5-EN-3-BETA-YL DICHLOROACETATE (1)
CHOLEST-5-EN-3-BETA-YL DICHLOROACETATE (1)
ETHYL DICHLOROACETATE (1)
Dichloroacetate causes toxic neuropathy in MELAS: a randomized, controlled clinical trial.
· Kaufmann P,
· Engelstad K,
· Wei Y,
· Jhung S,
· Sano MC,
· Shungu DC,
· Millar WS,
· Hong X,
· Gooch CL,
· Mao X,
· Pascual JM,
· Hirano M,
· Stacpoole PW,
· DiMauro S,
· De Vivo DC.
Department of Neurology, Columbia University, New York 10032, USA. pk88@columbia.edu
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy of dichloroacetate (DCA) in the treatment of mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS). BACKGROUND: High levels of ventricular lactate, the brain spectroscopic signature of MELAS, correlate with more severe neurologic impairment. The authors hypothesized that chronic cerebral lactic acidosis exacerbates neuronal injury in MELAS and therefore, investigated DCA, a potent lactate-lowering agent, as potential treatment for MELAS. METHODS: The authors conducted a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized, 3-year cross-over trial of DCA (25 mg/kg/day) in 30 patients (aged 10 to 60 years) with MELAS and the A3243G mutation. Primary outcome measure was a Global Assessment of Treatment Efficacy (GATE) score based on a health-related event inventory, and on neurologic, neuropsychological, and daily living functioning. Biologic outcome measures included venous, CSF, and 1H MRSI-estimated brain lactate. Blood tests and nerve conduction studies were performed to monitor safety.
RESULTS: During the initial 24-month treatment period, 15 of 15 patients randomized to DCA were taken off study medication, compared to 4 of 15 patients randomized to placebo. Study medication was discontinued in 17 of 19 patients because of onset or worsening of peripheral neuropathy. The clinical trial was terminated early because of peripheral nerve toxicity. The mean GATE score was not significantly different between treatment arms. CONCLUSION: DCA at 25 mg/kg/day is associated with peripheral nerve toxicity resulting in a high rate of medication discontinuation and early study termination. Under these experimental conditions, the authors were unable to detect any beneficial effect. The findings show that DCA-associated neuropathy overshadows the assessment of any potential benefit in MELAS.
The cited article on harmful effects (J Clin Pharmacol. 2006 Dec;46(12):1449-59) pertains to dichloroethane but sometimes calls it "dichloroacetate;" I have no idea why. The article is not relevant to the antitumor compound.
This to me is nice in vitro news. But let us remember vitamin C also showed promise in vitro in the 70's, but was useless in vivo.
As I said, there seems to be confusion over the term.It appears on reading this cite that it pertains to 1,2-(13)C-Dichloroacetate and I don't see anywhere where dichloroethane is mentioned including in its title and throughout its abstract. Where exactly do you find DCA being cross defined as dichloroethane? Why do you feel this is not relevant to the antitumor compound which is called dichloroacetate?
The toxicity of dichloroacetate has also been observed in human trials. It produced peripheral nerve toxicity and neuropathy which can be extremely painful. That study, which was terminated before completion due to this, is cited above.
The cited article on harmful effects (J Clin Pharmacol. 2006 Dec;46(12):1449-59) pertains to dichloroethane but sometimes calls it "dichloroacetate;" I have no idea why. The article is not relevant to the antitumor compound.
Complete lab-scale detoxification of groundwater containing 1,2-dichloroethane
Auteur(s) / Author(s)
DE WILDEMAN S. (1) ; LINTHOUT G. (1) ; VAN LANGENHOVE H. (1) ; VERSTRAETE W. (1) ;
Affiliation(s) du ou des auteurs / Author(s) Affiliation(s)
(1) Laboratory of Microbial Ecology and Technology (LabMET), Ghent University, Faculty of Agricultural and Applied Biological Sciences, Coupure Links 653, 9000 Ghent, BELGIQUE
"The suspected carcinogenic solvent 1,2-dichloroethane (1,2-DCA) is the most abundant chlorinated C[2] groundwater pollutant on earth.
However, an efficient reductive in situ detoxification technology for this compound is not known.
Detoxification results of 1,2-DCA with the recently isolated anaerobic bacterium Desulfitobacterium dichloroeliminans strain DCA1 are presented. First, it was verified that strain DCA1 could compete for nutrients in the presence of fast-growing Enterococcus faecalis; the latter was observed in the enrichment culture from which strain DCAI was isolated. Subsequently, lab-scale bioaugmentation of the strain to groundwater containing 40 mg 1,2-DCA/1 indicated that the bacterium has strong metabolic activity under prevailing environmental conditions, converting the pollutant into ethene. During exponential growth, the maximum 1,2-DCA dechlorination rate exceeded 350 nmol chloride released per min per mg total bacterial protein. Growth and dechlorination within the community with autochthonous bacteria indicated a high competitive strength of strain DCA1. Interestingly this dechlorination process does not produce any toxic byproducts, such as vinyl chloride. Furthermore, complete groundwater detoxification happens within a short time-frame (days) and is robust in terms of bacterial competition, oxygen tolerance, high ionic strength, and pH range.
Revue / Journal Title
Applied microbiology and biotechnology (Appl. microbiol. biotechnol.) ISSN 0175-7598 CODEN AMBIDG
Source / Source
2004, vol. 63, no5, pp. 609-612 [4 page(s) (article)] (15 ref.)
Well, as I said, there is confusion. I don't have immediate access to the J Clin Pharm paper which says “Dichloroacetate (DCA) is a putative environmental hazard."Notwithstanding the oddity of the nomenclature as you state in your last post, the figures in the quoted paper clearly show an acetate with two chlorines on the sp3 carbon. 1,2-dichloroethane doesn't seem to be in the paper at all.
I think that the confusion arose because the Europeans use "DCA" to describe what the US calls "DCE:" 1,2-dichloroethane, which is a pollutant and not the subject either of the article or of any clinical trials.
What the US calls "DCA" is 1,2-dichloroacetate, which is NOT a pollutant, and which is the potential drug cited in both the article in the OP, and the articles SteveGrenard posted clinical trials for other conditions on (and thanks, Steve- those might come in handy later).
IOW, I think the "DCA" acronym is what caused the confusion.
Yep.Anyone else old enough to remember when interferon was going to cure all cancers?
Nope. It has, however, ameliorated at least some of them; and is used today in chemotherapy for cancer. And it helps. But of course, your point is the hype, and I agree with that point.Now interferon was not, and is not, nonsense science, but it has not cured all cancers.
[Bold added] What the US calls DCA is still not 1,2-dichloroacetate; as I wrote previously, that is a misnomer for CH2ClCOCl. In acetate (CH3CO2-) the methyl group (CH3) is numbered 2, and anything substituted there is numbered 2. The putative drug is 2,2-dichloroacetate, or CHCl2CO2-. If the chlorine were on the #1 carbon, it would not be called acetate, it would be an acetyl chloride. In fact, unless editorial policies have recently changed, I can't imagine a chemist referring to 2,2-dichloroacetate; it would simply be "dichloroacetate" since there is nowhere else to put chlorine on acetate.I think that the confusion arose because the Europeans use "DCA" to describe what the US calls "DCE:" 1,2-dichloroethane, which is a pollutant and not the subject either of the article or of any clinical trials.
What the US calls "DCA" is 1,2-dichloroacetate, which is NOT a pollutant, and which is the potential drug cited in both the article in the OP, and the articles SteveGrenard posted clinical trials for other conditions on (and thanks, Steve- those might come in handy later).
IOW, I think the "DCA" acronym is what caused the confusion.