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DCA: Cancer Breakthrough Or Urban Legend?

Posted on 2/3/2007 11:52 AM by Dr. Len Lichtenfeld

There is the medical equivalent of a tsunami wave building out there, only we don’t know where this one is going to land.

 

It is called DCA, and we are suddenly receiving requests for information about something few if any of us had heard about as a cancer treatment until this past week.

 

I suspect some of this rapid explosion is fueled in part by the internet and the rapid exchange of information, and some by advocates who believe in the long-held conspiracy theory that someone is holding back the single simple answer to curing all cancer.

 

We even received an urgent plea from one media outlet on Thursday asking us to help them out with understanding DCA, since their website was being inundated with internet traffic that was overwhelming their servers.

 

Before we replace rational discourse with irrational exuberance, it is my personal opinion that a bit of caution is in order.  The basic reason for my conservative view is “been there, done that.”

 

I don’t know the details of how this phenomenon got started, but I can take a stab at an answer.

 

Do a general internet search on dichloroacetate (the actual name of this material) and cancer doesn’t rise to the top of the list before very recently.

 

That said, an article appeared in the January 2007 issue of Cancer Cell, written by a researcher at the University of Alberta in Canada.

 

I do not know the researcher, but the institution is one that is a recognized, established University.

 

The basic gist of the research report is that cancer cells rely on certain energy pathways that are different from normal cells, similar to the situation that occurs in what we medically call lactic acidosis.

 

Lactic acidosis in very simple terms occurs in our bodies when we are very ill or may be suddenly severely traumatized.  Our cells basically become starved for energy, and switch into other energy pathways that rely less on oxygen, resulting in the production of lactic acid.

 

As a result, when there are large quantities of lactic acid circulating in our system, it can contribute to a significantly increased risk of death.

 

What the Alberta researcher hypothesized was that cancer cells also work through similar metabolic pathways.  If you could revert them to normal, then the cells would switch back to the typical energy pathway, and either die or convert to normal cells.

 

Where DCA or dichloroacetic acid fits into this theory is that it can apparently convert the bad metabolic pathways into good ones. 

 

As noted in the conclusions of the study, it can do so while selectively affecting cancer cells and not harming normal cells.

 

According to the authors of the report, DCA is non-toxic and is currently used in children who have a rare genetic condition where they produce too much lactic acid.

 

They go on to point out that DCA is used in these children to reverse the condition with minimal or no side effects.

 

Let me assure you that this is a gross oversimplification of a very complicated discussion.  I personally never was a standout in biochemistry, and that was over 35 years ago.  Trying to explain this study in plain words is not an easy task.

 

But the concepts are basic, and the theories of differential cancer cell metabolism have been around for a long time.  The paper itself cites something called the Warburg theory espoused in the 1930s as an example of support for this principle.

 

In fact, for years we have been studying the possibility that improving the microenvironment surrounding cancer cells by increasing oxygen levels of tumors through various means will lead to improved responses to treatments.  Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is one example of such previous efforts.

 

(In contrast, the targeted therapy Avastin is based on the principle that by preventing blood vessel growth in cancers, you will starve the tumors blood supply, oxygen levels will go down and the cancer will slow or stop its growth.)

 

To demonstrate the concept, the authors in the current report did a number of experiments that came to the conclusion that DCA was in fact effective in meeting the goals of their expectations. 

 

In these experiments in the laboratory, they found that DCA could in fact reverse the abnormal metabolism in several laboratory-based cancer cell lines.  DCA also reversed the “immortality” of these test tube cancer cells and induced a process of cell death called apoptosis.

 

Finally, they injected some of these laboratory-based cancer cell lines into rats who were genetically engineered to have no basic immune system, and found that if they put DCA into their drinking water, the tumor growth was significantly slower than in a comparison group of rats that did not receive DCA.

 

In one group of rats where DCA was given after the injected tumors had been allowed to grow, the tumors immediately (in the authors’ word) decreased in size.

 

So far, so good.

 

But here is where things begin to get a bit dicey.

 

These are quotes taken directly from the article.  The first is from a summary printed at the bottom of the first page of the report:

 

“The ease of delivery, selectivity, and effectiveness make DCA an attractive candidate for proapoptotic cancer therapy which can be rapidly translated into phase II–III clinical trials.”

 

In the discussion section of the paper, the authors conclude with the following statement:

 

Our work identifies the mitochondria-NFAT-Kv channel axis and PDK as critical components of the metabolicelectrical remodeling that characterizes many human

cancers and offers a tantalizing suggestion that DCA may have selective anticancer efficacy in patients. The very recent report of the first randomized long-term clinical trial of oral DCA in children with congenital lactic acidosis (at doses similar to those used in our in vivo experiments) showing that DCA was well tolerated and safe (Stacpoole et al., 2006) suggests a potentially easy translation of our work to clinical oncology.” (Emphasis mine)

 

In other words, the authors are saying that in their opinion these experiments in the lab and rats suggests that DCA may be a simple, effective treatment for cancer and we should move forward with clinical trials based solely on their theory and their results.

 

I am not being critical of the authors’ comments, except for describing this as a “potentially easy” process.  Nothing in translation from the bench to the bedside is easy.

 

This is not the first time such suggestive statements have been made.  In fact, these types of comments are not unusual in papers of this type.

 

What I am critical of is the lack of discrimination in judgment of other folks—not the researchers--who have picked up on these lines and rapidly circulated the thought that we have a cure for cancer at hand, and that we must stop doing everything else and get this simple, safe and effective treatment to cancer patients immediately.

 

Even my own blog was “hit” with such a suggestion this past week.

 

Well, as they say, if I had a nickel for every time I have heard such a proposition based on this type of evidence, I would be a rich man.

 

Please try to understand that I am NOT saying this is a theory that won’t work.  It may, and if it does prove valuable, that would be terrific.

 

It is just that I have been around a while and have seen this type of hope and hype just a few times too many.

 

I have seen cancer patients hopes lifted and dashed so often that I can’t help but be cautious and conservative in my thinking.

 

Let’s take a look at what we can say.

 

First, I did a literature search on PubMed looking for articles with the terms dichloroacetic acid and cancer.

 

Although I didn’t have access to all of the articles, one underlying theme stood out:  DCA is an organic chemical that causes liver cancer in laboratory mice when put in their drinking water.

 

It is NOT non-toxic.  It is a byproduct of another chemical called trichloroethylene (TCE), which has been a source of concern as a cancer causing agent for some time. (A simple Google search will give you over 8 million hits on this topic.)

 

Here is what the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry has to say about TCE:

 

“HIGHLIGHTS: Trichloroethylene is a colorless liquid which is used as a solvent for cleaning metal parts. Drinking or breathing high levels of trichloroethylene may cause nervous system effects, liver and lung damage, abnormal heartbeat, coma, and possibly death. Trichloroethylene has been found in at least 852 of the 1,430 National Priorities List sites identified by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).”

 

So before you start going out and adding DCA to your drinking water to prevent cancer, a degree of caution would be very prudent at this point.

 

Another article that came up in the Google search was a 1983 article from the New England Journal of Medicine.

 

Here is a quote from that article:

 

“Despite improvement in their lactic acidemia, all patients but one died of their underlying disease. No serious drug-related toxicity occurred. We conclude that dichloroacetate is a safe and effective adjunct in the treatment of patients with lactic acidosis, although the ultimate prognosis may depend on the underlying disease.”

 

In other words, the treatment was a success, but the patient died.

 

But experience is the best teacher in my opinion.

 

For example, even in the short time this blog has been in “production” I have written articles on other relatively non-toxic substances and their potential role in either preventing or reducing the burden of cancer.

 

New discoveries about vitamin C and vitamin D come to mind.

 

We haven’t seen the hue and cry about getting these vitamins into cancer clinical trials, yet based on evidence similar to the DCA paper, there is equal reason to believe that either or both of these vitamins may have a role in cancer prevention and/or cancer treatment.

 

Still vivid in my mind was something that happened in the early 1970s when I was training to be an oncologist at the National Cancer Institute.

 

To the best of my recollection, a research report suggested that a particular material was very effective in treating acute leukemia.  Once again, mice that had a transplanted leukemia were given this drug, and the leukemia miraculously disappeared.

 

To demonstrate that this new drug was so non-toxic that the researcher went on to one of the major national morning television shows and injected himself with the drug right there on camera as he touted his new discovery.

 

The problem was that there were only very, very small amounts of the drug available.

 

Research centers around the world rapidly picked up the beat, and vied to get their hands on some of this new miracle powder.

 

Cancer research centers were receiving phone calls with incredible offers of financial support from wealthy patients with leukemia, if they could just get these folks this wonder drug.

 

The only thing we found out was that it didn’t work at all.

 

Of course, there are stories on the other side of the aisle so to speak, where simple discoveries in fact have proven to have great benefit in the treatment of some cancers, such as the treatment of promyelocytic leukemia.

 

But the overwhelming number of promising laboratory experiments have not ended up as effective cancer treatments when they move from the bench to the bedside, if they are even able to get to the bedside in the first place.

 

It is indeed a long, difficult road that must be traveled to demonstrate that an exciting new idea actually works in the treatment of cancer.

 

So, pardon me if I am a skeptic.  As Jessica Rabbit said, “I am just drawn that way.”

 

But I am also an optimist, as I have said many times in these pages.  I do believe that there are exciting new developments in cancer treatment emerging from laboratories around the world.   Maybe DCA is one of them.

 

Right now, we simply do not know what is going to occur as DCA moves through the research pipeline, first with laboratory confirmation and critical analysis of these findings and then on to the clinic if others review this report and agree that DCA is a promising approach that deserves a clinical trial in the treatment of cancer.

 

It’s just that I believe in patience, prudence and caution because my experience has taught me that those are the best guidelines to follow in assessing reports such as the one in Cancer Cell.

 

It is way too soon to know whether this is a cancer treatment breakthrough or an urban legend or something in between.

 

I am acutely aware that there are cancer patients out there who are fighting every day for their survival, and are hoping that there is one last chance to get a treatment that may prolong or save their lives.

 

For some of you out there to inappropriately make them feel that DCA is the answer to their prayers based on this single early stage report in a medical research journal is, in my opinion, not acceptable at best and despicable at worst. 

 

 

 

 

Comments

Page 1 of 10
Posted on 2/5/2007 12:08 PM by Hershel Patel          
Dear Dr. Litchfield: I do not believe that anyone involved in the scientific community has bad intent in trying to search for a more effective treatment to cancer. This treatment may be a grand success or it may turn out to be a familiar disappointment, but I believe we as a society can both hope for major breakthroughs in research religiously , but still be grounded in reality. Personally, I would despise only those that tried to sell DCA in some sort of snake-oil scheme. However, I find it healthy for the public to discuss about science, even if we are not academic experts. I believe this does promote better public health. Sincerely, Hershel Patel
Posted on 2/5/2007 2:23 PM by Andrew Heitman          
Following this post back to a rather heated (and somewhat irrational) discussion of the decrease in mammogram complacency, it seems that there is problem in the public with information management. Or maybe its disinformation management. A narrow perspective was given on the availability of DCA and its efficacy in the breast cancer forums and I think you adequately addressed those concerns. Unfortunately, individuals who feel that DCA is a silver bullet will not be dissuaded, regardless of logical reason. The human body is an incredibly complex entity, and a layman attempting to understanding it in its "normal" state is nothing compared to the extremely complex molecular pathology of a body battling cancer. With the amount of altruistic humans out there in research, in medicine, reason would have it that if DCA were the magical cure some tout it, it would be made available and studies would have been furthered. Conspiracy theorists love the drama more than the truth and unfortunately they can create convincing arguments from anecdote and speculation. This is more a problem of public health education, something massively lacking in this country. Not a big pharmy evil hate-the-world conspiracy
Posted on 2/5/2007 9:38 PM by Charles King          
Dear Dr. Lichfield: I find your blog useful in following the medico-scientific discussion of cancer origins and treatment. Thank you for publishing it. I am a fortunate cancer survivor, having been diagnosed with final stage multiple myeloma in 2003. From the beginning I have pursued an integrative medical approach coupled with the most aggressive, scientificaly-advanced treatment offered by modern oncology, at a world-renowned center: surgery, radiation therapy, standard VAD, autologous stem cell transplant, and allegenic stem cell transplant. My goal is cure from an "invaribly fatal" cancer, not a short remission. Along the way, I have become more than passingly familiar with the extraordinary biological complexity of cancer, especially blood cancers, and most especially, of multiple myeloma. That complexity, and scientific medicine's inability to understand and definitively treat it is what originally led me to integrative medicine. So I was more than a little gratified to see your mentiion of a possible role for vitamin D in cancer prevention and therapy in your discussion of DCA. That tells me integrative concepts are progressing. I would advocate that there is a large deficiency in current cancer therapy caused mainly by the skepticism and experiences of many practitioners in treating typical patients. Often patients are so terrified by the diagnosis that they do not fully understand or explore the possibilities of treatment, even including those offered by integrative medicine. My own attitude has been to find and exploit every advantage, no matter how small. Unfortunately, many oncologists do not understand that approach, let alone advocate it to their patients. Integrative medicine, not to mention DCA, may have far more to offer sufferers than has been previously recognized, especially by those wedded to the rationalism and skepticism inherent in the scientific method. That is why medicine will always remain an art to me. My own personal experience is that so much more is unknown than is known that there is very little hope of complete scientific understanding of cancer for many years to come. That fact solidifies my view that the mind's role in prevention and cure will lag far behind the mechanistic steps that typify most oncological approaches. As a profession, medicine needs to relearn principles laid down by the Greeks more than 3,000 years ago to get the most out of our scientific progress. Accordingly, it seems to me the researchers in Alberta deserve a chance to explore their mechanistic hypothesis on human subjects in properly vetted human trials as soon as possible. Their concern for funding is very real, but the potential is possibly immense. I know there are many willing subjects who advocate it is their right, if after having failed standard treatments, to attempt to aid mankind through volunteering for clinical trials, even at the risk of shortening their diminishing time on this earth. That was certainly my attitude when I fought successfully for my chance at a clinical trial back in 2003. And I also recognize that this is but a shot in the dark, and one of many, many once-promising avenues that turned out to be but a blind ally. Again thank you for your excellent efforts to advance medical knowledge and public understanding.
Posted on 2/6/2007 5:32 AM by Janardan Yri          
I think the inconsistency between the reliability of a hypothesis and its reporting in the media comes down to two problems: that the media's economic objectives - to garner viewer/readership and advertising/subscription revenue - ultimately are at odds with the principles of good science, and that few in the media really understand good science to begin with. Science rarely has single points at which previously unknown phenomena are suddenly demonstrated to be shockingly true. Relativity didn't overthrow Newton the day Einstein's papers were published, or that year or even decade. Yet few outside of scientific professions understand that process, and so when an explosive study comes out most pass judgments immediately and fail to understand why some are not so quick to excite. Having human health as the subject only exacerbates the issue by throwing emotions in the mix, as many are understandably disposed to want to believe regardless of the odds. It's doubtful that the general ignorance towards health and science can be improved without many years of effort and education, but here's hoping this blog helps it along. Goodness knows it could use the help.
Posted on 2/6/2007 2:49 PM by john c.          
Melanoma and other cancers are killing people every day in this country and around the world, while pharmaceuticals put their billions behind patentable chemicals/compounds that have some minor potential for killing cancer. In the meantime, the FDA slows their approval to a trickle of poisons every year, all of which allow more deaths then they save. Now that something erxtremely promising like DCA comes along and instead of encouraging profit-biased institutions to throw some resources at this DCA, you pooh-pooh it. I hope some day, when DCA is found to be an effective cancer killer, you will be one of the institutional nay sayers whose comments will be looked upon by history as biased, obstructionist, and typical of the thinking that prevents, rather than ignites discovery.
Posted on 2/6/2007 3:14 PM by Roger Schaaf          
I am always reminded just how slowly the medical community will pick up and support new ideas or possible cures. One that first comes to mind is the tale of the Aussies who first discovered that ulcers were probably caused by a bacteria and not stress, spicy foods, etc. It took some 15 years before the rest of the medical community to pick up on this idea and now these researchers have been given the Nobel Prize. I believe it was a 60 Minute segment that finally woke our medical community from their slumber. In my case, I have known for some 20 years that my IBS problems were totally caused by fructose and high fructose corn syrup in my diet. Avoid it, no problem, ingest it diarrhea continuously. This I discovered after visits to John Hopkings, UCSF, Stanford and multiple esteemed Gastro Docs all over America. Now I see that they are waking up and fructose and so called small bowel overgrowth is finally getting the credit it deserves for a huge number of the IBS sufferers in the USA. Before this, it was send the poor slub to a shrink as IBS was a mental problem. This DCA could fall on either side, but let us not have the typical medical community closed mind, the stakes are too high for many. Roger
Posted on 2/6/2007 8:19 PM by Peter Chan          
This is a comment to john.c What will you say when the next "great breakthrough" paper on cancer research is published? As Dr. Lichtenfeld wrote, this phenomena has happened before and will probably happen again. You people need to study some basic cancer biology. You will realize cancer is very complex. It is not one disease but, many hundreds perhaps thousands of conditions (if you count the underlying genetic mutations and the location of the disease). Do not expect a one wonder drug to cure all cancers in the future. I am more hopeful that targeted drugs will be developed in the near future for indefinite remissions of specific cancers caused by specific genetic mutations. You only need to look up Gleevec, Dasatinib and Nilotinib as examples. I, like Dr. Lictenfeld, would love to see one of these research papers done on mice or cell cultures, translate to an effective treatment with no or few side effects. However, we are realistic.
Posted on 2/6/2007 10:34 PM by Robert Chan          
Another interesting thing to note: CARDIOMETABOLICS INC , which holds two patents on injectable DCA, is a spinoff company from the U of Alberta. It's in the U of Alberta's best interest to find alternative uses for DCA. Thanks for the information regarding the studies you've found in your journal reviews.
Posted on 2/7/2007 2:15 AM by Al Paliotta          
You stated, "... New discoveries about vitamin C and vitamin D come to mind. We haven't seen the hue and cry about getting these vitamins into cancer clinical trials, yet based on evidence similar to the DCA paper, there is equal reason to believe that either or both of these vitamins may have a role in cancer prevention and/or cancer treatment." Perhaps you haven'y heard of DN-101, a Vitamin D derivative, currently in Phase III trials (Ascent 2) for metastatic prostate cancer.
Posted on 2/7/2007 4:35 AM by Frank          
Dear Dr. Lictenfeld, I don't consider it despicable to enlighten a desperate cancer sufferer about a possible effective treatment when conventional medicine has nothing left to offer. It's more despicable to deny such hope. Also you fail to mention that the Warburg theory refers to the man who won the Nobel Prize for discovering the exact way cells use energy. He was very familiar with aerobic and anaerobic respiration, and in his Nobel acceptance speech discussed his hypothesis that cancer cells used anaerobic respiration producing lactic acid. His idea was supported more recently by the work of Dr. Joseph Gold with hydrazine sulfate. But that's another (controversial) story.
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