Insulin potentiation therapy (IPT) is an alternative cancer treatment using insulin and low-dose chemotherapy.[1]
The therapeutic approach is said to take advantage of the endogenous molecular biology of cancer cells, specifically the secretion of insulin and insulin-like growth factor, and the interaction of these biochemicals with their specific receptors. By using insulin in conjunction with chemotherapy drugs, significantly less drugs (about 10-15 % of a standard dose) can be targeted more specifically and more effectively to cancer cell populations, thus virtually eliminating dose-related side-effects while claiming enhancing antineoplastic effects.
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Some physicians have labeled insulin potentiation therapy a form of quackery and have warned against its use.[2]
The proponents of IPT give the following explanation of the biology of cancer and its cells in order to understand the mechanisms of IPT, which relies upon insulin, the most integral component of IPT, having three significant actions upon cancer cells described below, as well as also dropping blood sugar levels and thus the energy source for cancer. Low blood glucose (below 60 mg/dl) also stimulates secretion of growth hormone, and growth hormone, it is presumed, helps to strengthen the immune system.
Insulin biologically differentiates cancer cells from normal cells based on insulin receptor concentration.
Insulin can serve to distinguish and differentiate cancer cells from healthy cells in several ways. Insulin is produced in the pancreas, one of whose many functions is the regulation of blood glucose levels. Insulin activates a glucose transport protein within all cells – whether they be cancerous or healthy - which allows glucose, the energy source, to enter, thus lowering the blood glucose level.
The growth of cancer is abnormally rapid, its sole purpose being to spread, therefore it has a voracious appetite compared to normal cells. Cancer cells have developed the ability to produce insulin and insulin-like growth factor (IGF) themselves; this way they can autonomously increase their glucose uptake.[3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]
Being able to produce its own insulin makes cancer different from normal cells, but there is a second abnormality that insulin highlights. Every cell in the body has insulin receptors on the outer surface of its membrane, from 100-100,000 receptors per cell. But cancer cells have a much higher concentration of receptors. Breast cancer cells, for example, have six times more insulin receptors and ten times more IGF receptors per cell than normal cells. As an added boost, insulin is able to react with its own receptors and is also able to cross-react with and activate the IGF receptors on cancer cells. This means that insulin will affect cancer cells sixteen times as strongly as it affects normal tissues.[13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24] Something else to take into consideration is that ligand effect is a function of receptor concentration. In a particular tissue, the more receptors there are for a certain ligand – such as insulin – the greater the effect of that ligand on that tissue.
By activating the insulin and IGF receptors on cancer cells through the administration of insulin during an IPT treatment, the biological differences of cancer cells can be highlighted – a vital consideration for the safety of cancer chemotherapy.
Not only does insulin provide cancer cells with the means to grow it has also been proven that IGFs are the most potent mitogen - promoter of cell division - for cancer growth.
The favorable effect in a treatment that is trying to kill cancer is in the killing mechanism of chemotherapy medications. The standard pharmacologic treatment for cancer involves drugs, which are designed to attack cells that are dividing, cell division being the means by which tissue "grows." Cancer cells are rapidly dividing cells, and are constantly going through cell division. There are several phases to cell division, the one called the S-Phase being when cells replicate DNA. There are some chemotherapy agents that are S-Phase-dependent: They attack cells that are in the S-phase of cell division, not cells in the resting phase.
However, hair cells, red and white blood cells, and cells found in the digestive tract also fall into this category of rapidly dividing cells - the reason why the side-effects related to standard chemotherapy are associated with these areas. In order to get a tumoral response in conventional chemotherapy, a high dose of drugs has to be used, causing healthy cells to be affected, as well. The chemotherapy drugs by themselves cannot differentiate between rapidly dividing cancer cells and rapidly dividing healthy cells. By implementing insulin in conjunction with chemotherapy drugs, the cancer cells are highlighted as being different based on receptor concentration and are promoted to grow, which makes it likely that more of them will be in the S-phase cycle. These effects allow for the powerful chemo agents to target the cancer cells more specifically, sparing healthy cells and, therefore, chemo-related side-effects.
The third effect that insulin has on cancer cells is to activate enzyme activity in the cell membrane, making them more permeable.
Cell membranes are largely made up of triglycerides, which are built of fatty acids. The more saturated a fatty acid is the higher the melting point (example: butter [a saturated fat with a higher melting point] is solid at room temperature, whereas olive oil [an unsaturated fat with a lower melting point] is a liquid). The enzyme that insulin activates is called delta-9 desaturase, and the action of this enzyme is to de-saturate - to make a saturated fat into an unsaturated fat. Delta-9 desaturase - once it has been activated by insulin - de-saturates the fatty acids that make up the cell membrane of cancer cells. This fatty acid – saturated stearic acid – has a melting point of 65 °C. Stearic acid, once it has been de-saturated, becomes mono-unsaturated oleic acid, which has a melting point of 5 °C. At physiologic temperatures (the temperature of the body, about 37.5 °C), tristearin – triglyceride with three stearic acids attached that composes the cancer cell membrane - is going to be more "waxy" than "oily" because of its higher melting point. This makes for a less permeable cell membrane. On the other hand, once the insulin has activated the enzyme delta-9 desaturase, the cell membrane of cancer cells is composed of triolein – the triglyceride with three oleic acids attached – with a melting point of 5 °C. This cell membrane will be more permeable at physiologic temperatures. The chemotherapy drugs are, thus, able to enter the cancer cells more easily because of the increased cell membrane permeability, providing the required intracellular dose intensity to kill the cancer.
Insulin is used in IPT to enhance anticancer drug cytoxicity and safety, via 1) an effect of biological differentiation based on insulin receptor concentration, 2) an effect of metabolic modification to increase the S-phase fraction in cancer cells, enhancing their susceptibility to cell-cycle phase-specific agents, and 3) a membrane permeability effect to increase the intracellular dose intensity of the drugs. Significantly less drug can, thus, be targeted more specifically and more effectively to cancer cells, all this occurring with a virtual elimination of the dose-related side-effects.[25][26]
In-vitro studies [27][28] have shown how IPT works supporting the informal clinical work that has been conducted on hundreds of patients worldwide.
A clinical trial of IPT for treating breast cancer was done in Uruguay and concluded that "The group treated with insulin + methotrexate responded most frequently with stable disease" compared to being treated with methotrexate alone or insulin alone.[29]
In 2000, the National Cancer Institute's Cancer Advisory Panel on Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAPCAM) invited Drs. Perez Garcia and Ayre to present IPT to them as part of the National Cancer Institute's (NCI's) Best Case Series program.[30][31] However CAPCAM have not in the time since undertaken any further research into IPT.