Iris Publishers - Current Trends in Clinical & Medical Sciences (CTCMS)
A New Hope for Cancer Therapy with Liquid Knife & Immuno Therapy: UMIPIC
Authored by Baofa Yu
Recent years cancer immunological
therapy is getting very popular and many new drug have been approved by FDA
like PD1 and PDl-1, however, in clinical practice of cancer treatment, it looks
very limited efficacy for advanced cancer, so that physician started to use
comprehensive plan by combination chemotherapy with PD1 as a novel strategy
with a better clinical benefit. Since chemotherapy always produce the side
effect like loss hair, vomit and neutropenia. Because of the extremely toxic
side effects, many cancer patients cannot successfully complete a complete
course of chemotherapy, and some even die from the side effects of chemotherapy
due to a patient’s poor tolerance. The extreme side effects of anti-cancer
drugs are often caused by the poor target specificity of such drugs regarding
the tumor in the patient’s body. The drugs circulate through most normal organs
of patients as well as the intended target tumors (less than 5% of the drug
reach the tumor), while over 95% of the drug circulates through the whole body
of the patient.
The more and more cancer patients
do not like to choice to chemotherapy, it is pushing the oncologists to be in
the embarrassed situation to suggest the therapy for the patient who lost
surgery opportunity, in the fact for most late stages of cancer, how many
choice our oncologists can give? a few choice, today I do like to introduce one
treatment which is suitable for the most of latte stages of solid tumor with
benefit, UMIPIC, ultra-minimum incision personalized intratumorally
chemoimmunotherapy.
UMIPIC is a unique eclectic
approach for cancer treatment utilizing the intratumorally injection of a
combination of chemotherapy drugs (including Dox and Ara-C), coagulant agent
oxidant to maintain the chemo agents at the injection site for a longer period
of time, and a hapten for hapenation with intracellular tumor-associated
antigens to stimulate the patient’s immune response while the tumor is been
de-bulking like liquid surgery knife. Safer and more aggressive (higher dose)
administration of toxic chemotherapy drugs that go directly into a tumor site
with slow release, is an obvious and beneficial alternative to systemic
treatment. The local retention afforded by intratumoral administration results
in slowed and/or reduced entry of drug into the systemic circulation,
minimizing exposure of distant tissues to the drug, and thus, resulting in a lower
incidence of systemic side effects a more tumor killed. So far, there are 56
clinical trials found for intratumoral chemotherapy (ITCT) by visiting the
website at the following: https://clinicaltrials.gov. But there is not one
integrated with immune therapy and surgery knife to action like de-bulk.
In 1994, Dr. Yu developed the new
concept of using the tumor itself as a drug carrier. Injection of anti-cancer
drug ethanol saturated liquid into the tumor can generate a kind of
intratumoral autologous therapeutic coagulum which can function as an antitumor
drug depot. This autologous therapeutic coagulum can sustain or store
anticancer drug in tumor and the surrounding tumor tissues to kill the tumor
cells that have not been killed through ethanol coagulation treatment. It makes
a fitting complement for the inadequacy of pure ethanol tumor treatment. A
study of retaining drug in injected tumor demonstrated that the retention
half-life of anticancer drug Ara-C in the tumor was 160 minutes following depot
injection compared to only 6 minutes following intratumoral injection of Ara-C
aqueous solution, thus increasing the drug retention by approximately 27 times
[1]. The problem of using ethanol is that is is limited by the dosage for the
patient and is also limited by tumor size (when the volume of tumor is large,
it can dilute ethanol making it inefficient). Now Dr. Yu found oxidant is good
role to replace the ethanol to coagulation of tumor as a drug carrier for slow
releasing [2].
From 2003 to 2006, Dr. Yu also
published many papers showing that the combination of intratumoral drug with
hapten modification improves the immunogenicity of tumor cells, effectively
inducing or activating body’s antitumor immune response and had 276 patients
with cancer reported [3-5]. It indicates that when hapten is added to the
UMIPIC, it plays an important role in stimulating immune response.
The UMIPIC is comprised of
commercially available drugs for intratumoral injection which includes oxidant
as coagulant, chemotherapy drugs and hapten. Intratumoral injection with
UMIPIC, it produces its antitumor role in the following aspects:
The first aspect is coagulation by
the oxidant. “Tumor coagulation” refers the process by which the blood clots to
form solid masses, or clots, and their components and extracellular matrix are
transformed into a kind of soft, semi-solid, or solid block. This
transformation is induced by oxidation, which makes openings in the membrane of
tumor cells. This creates higher permeability of membrane that allows the drugs
to penetrate into tumor cells and eventually leads to the death of coagulated
tumor cells and enhancement of the cancer drug entering agglomerated tumor
cells.
The second aspect is the
concentration and sustainability of the drugs, the two key elements: Drug
dosage and amount of time for destruction of cancer cells. Tumor coagulation
also creates a “drug depot” which not only increases local drug action
concentration (dozens or even hundreds of times more than the normal
concentration by intravenous chemotherapy) to kill the tumor, but also retains
the drugs within the tumor and gradually releases them from inside to the
outside to kill residual tumor cells around tumor tissue. This “drug depot” not
only extends drug action time in the tumor, but also prevents the leakage of
anti-cancer drugs from the tumor, and lowers systemic drug concentration,
toxicity and side effects.
The third aspect is stimulation of
immune response. Tumor cells killed by the tumor coagulation effect and the
chemotherapeutic agents could release intracellular proteins including
tumorassociated antigens, which may already interact with hapten in that active
reaction with tumor oxidation. The tumor antigens induce a personalized
systemic immune response and the haptenation of tumor antigens could further
stimulate immune response, thereby eliminating recurring or metastatic tumor
cells.
The schematic diagram is shown
with the function of components in UMIPIC and the Procedure of UMIPIC: Guided
by CT, find the optimal route and angle for introducing the needle
intratumoral, the needle is inserted into the tumor, connected to the inflator,
the regimens of UMIPIC were slowly delivered into the tumor; a high pressure
supplied by the inflator; the solution (UMIPIC) can penetrate into the
extracellular matrix of tumor and facilitate forced diffusion. Same injection
could be repeated to same tumor or other tumor several times according to
evaluating by CT and physician or investigator brochures [6-9].
In the past years, UMIPIC treated
lung cancer, median overall survival was 11.23 months in the UMIPIC (test)
group and 5.62 months in the ITCT (control) group (P<0.01). The 6-month and
1-year survival rates of the UMIPIC and ITCT groups were 76.36% versus 45.23%
(P<0.01) and 45.45% versus 23.81% (P<0.05), respectively. Two cycles of
UMIPIC treatment (N=19) conferred a significant survival benefit compared with
two cycles of ITCT (N=29); significant benefits in survival time were also
found with UMIPIC (N=20) compared with ITCT (N=13) when both were utilized
without hapten treatment.
Also UMIPIC for liver cancer with
good result: the benefit rates (complete response + partial response + stable
disease) were 78.68% and 81.52% in the UMIPIC and ITCT groups, respectively,
with no statistically significant difference; however, the median overall
survival was 7 months for UMIPIC (test) and 4 months for ITCT (control),
respectively (P<0.01). The 6-month and 1-year survival rates for UMIPIC and
ITCT were 58.88% vs 32.3% and 30.37% vs 13.6%, respectively (P<0.01). Single
and multiple UMIPIC revealed significant improvement in overall survival
compared to that of ITCT.
In the past years, UMIPIC treated
pancreatic cancer, for single drug, median survival was 6.45 months for
UMIPIC-S vs 4.98 months for ITCT-S, (P<0.05), one-year survival rate was 28%
for UMIPIC-S vs 5% for ITCT-S (P<0.05). For double drugs, median survival
was 15.5 months for UMIPIC-D vs 3 months in ITCT-D (P<0.01). The 6-month
survival rate was 76.67% for UMIPIC-D vs 18.18% for ITCT-D (P<0.01) and
1-year survival rate for 56.67% UMIPIC-D vs 9.09% ITCT (P<0.01).
UMIPIC is a simple, clinically
effective drug for a broad spectrum of tumors with minimal side effects through
ultra-minimal invasive surgery under the guide of CT or ultrasound. In
conclusion, UMIPIC provides a new method of decreasing tumor mass while boost
the patient’s own immunological power to fight against micro tumor cells in a
specific and innovative manner, which is one of its advantages over any
treatment. Another advantage is that it is not limited in terms of tumor size,
number, or location in the lung, liver, pancreatic or any location of tumor. In
future, it is possible that UMIPIC may overtake in the treatment of all stages
of tumor in the lung, liver, pancreatic or any location of tumor. UMIPIC can
take the place of surgery and chemotherapy or radiation therapy in patients who
are not suited for surgery or chemotherapy. We hope to continue to investigate
UMIPIC therapy with double cytotoxic drugs with double hapten under clinical
study to improve effectiveness.
Today, it is time to think how to
replace the surgery, chemotherapy and radiation therapy which produce a damage
of patient with cancer, we believe UMIPIC has provided a new eclectic approach
for the treatment of primary all solid tumor at anywhere of body, even pre
surgery and during of operation. UMIPIC is safe, easy to operate, and
reproducible with good benefit for all solid tumor.
To read more about this article: https://irispublishers.com/ctcms/fulltext/a-new-hope-for-cancer-therapy-with-liquid-knife.ID.000524.php
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