Abstract

BackgroundUnsaturated fatty acids (UFAs) exhibit in vitro cytotoxicity against many malignant cell lines and yield decreased cancer incidence and reduced tumor growth in animal models. But clinical and animal studies to date have achieved response using only localized delivery methods such as intratumoral infusion. To explore possibilities for enhanced clinical efficacy, fresh surgical explants of tumors from 22 patients with five malignancies were exposed to γ-linolenic acid (GLA) and α-linolenic acid (ALA) and analyzed with an in vitro chemosensitivity testing system, the Fluorescent Cytoprint Assay (FCA). A total of 282 micro-organ cultures derived from these malignant tumors were exposed to GLA and ALA at different concentrations.ResultsGLA and ALA exhibited greater than 90% cytotoxicity at a sharp concentration threshold between 500 μM and 1 mM against all but two malignant micro-organ cultures tested in 5-10% serum. In tests using 30-40% serum, GLA and ALA killed tumor at concentrations of 2 mM and above.ConclusionsThe concentration threshold of 500 μM to 2 mM exhibited for antitumor activity by GLA and ALA is much higher than that observed in most previously reported cell culture studies but consistent with physiological concentrations found to kill tumor clinically and in animals. A mechanism of antitumor activity by unsaturated fatty acids through selective destabilization of the malignant plasma membrane is considered. An oral regimen is proposed for phase I clinical testing that could push the area under the curve for serum concentration of unbound unsaturated fatty acids over time to much higher levels than previously achieved for systemic administration and into the range that could yield antitumor response.

Highlights

  • Unsaturated fatty acids (UFAs) exhibit in vitro cytotoxicity against many malignant cell lines and yield decreased cancer incidence and reduced tumor growth in animal models

  • Tumor kill is exhibited at a sharp concentration threshold of 500 μM for ALA in Fig. 1A and for GLA in Fig. 1C and at a sharp concentration threshold of 1 mM for

  • It is noteworthy that for each of 22 surgical explants of five malignant types, GLA and ALA each exhibited greater than 90% cytotoxic activity at a sufficiently high concentration threshold

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Unsaturated fatty acids (UFAs) exhibit in vitro cytotoxicity against many malignant cell lines and yield decreased cancer incidence and reduced tumor growth in animal models. Unsaturated fatty acids (UFAs), including the ω-6 agent GLA and the ω-3 agent ALA, have been observed to exhibit cytotoxicity [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8] or growth inhibition [9,10,11,12,13,14,15] against a variety of malignant cell lines. Sphase BrdUrd labeling of tissue from proctoscopic mucosal biopsies, a predictor for incidence of new neoplasms, dropped to 29% of its baseline value after six months for the ω-3 supplemented group but rose in the corn oil-supplemented group [26]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call