TAGAMET - Did Anyone Know It's Used To Treat Cancer? And Is Very Effective!

expose'

The Pulse......
Yes! Tagamet (Cimetidine)- the now over the counter acid reducer, has been studied and used to treat several cancers over the past decade! Check this out! It's amazing!

Remember - the current odds that you or someone you love will have cancer are 1 in 2 men and 2 in 3 women! That's why I'm providing these threads...

From 1990 to 1992, 64 patients were enrolled in a study to examine the effects of cimetidine. Patients were treated for one year after surgery with 5-fluorouracil and cimetidine or 5-fluorouracil alone. In a recently published summary of that study, the results are truly remarkable. Overall, the 10-year survival rate for the cimetidine treated group was 84.6%. The group 10-year survival rate of the group that received 5-fluorouracil alone was 49.8%.


In 1994, a study was performed that demonstrated that just seven days of treatment with cimetidine (five days pre-operative and two days post-operative) decreased the three-year mortality rate from 41% to 7% in colorectal cancer patients.

http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2002/jul2002_cover_cimetidine_01.html

LE Magazine July 2002

Cimetidine (Tagamet®)
For Cancer Treatment

by Dr. Michele Morrow, Board Certified Family Physician & Life Extension Medical Advisor

Cimetidine (brand name Tagamet®) is a drug historically used to reduce stomach acid production. Published research dating back more than 20 years shows that this drug might make a greater impact in medicine if used as a cancer therapy rather than as a treatment for gastric disorders.

Since cimetidine is so well known as an H2 blocker medication to reduce stomach acid secretion, its role in cancer treatment has been grossly overlooked. This same misperception occurred when aspirin was first recommended to prevent a heart attack or stroke. Doctors were accustomed to prescribing aspirin to relieve pain and inflammation, but were unfamiliar with the concept of taking aspirin to prevent cardiovascular disease and thrombotic events.


It is now the standard of care for a patient who has had a heart attack or stroke to be placed on aspirin as long as there are no individual contraindications. To date, the proven benefits of cimetidine to treat cancer have not been recognized by the medical community. The results of a brand new study on colon cancer patients may provide enough compelling evidence to convince oncologists that cimetidine is an effective adjuvant therapy.

In this article, we discuss research that substantiates the anti-cancer benefits of cimetidine and reveal what types of colon cancer cimetidine has been shown to be effective against. The brand name for cimetidine is Tagamet®, which is sold over-the-counter and as a prescription medication.

The first studies suggesting that cimetidine (Tagamet®) might be effective against cancer were published in the late 1970s. Scientists initially thought that cimetidine worked by enhancing immune function. Later studies showed that cimetidine functions via several different pathways to inhibit tumor cell propagation and metastasis.

In 1988 a prospective, randomized, placebo controlled study investigated the effect of cimetidine on the survival of 181 patients with gastric cancer. They were given either cimetidine at a dose of 400 mg twice daily or placebo for two years or until death. The study found that those given cimetidine had a significantly prolonged survival rate particularly in patients with more serious (stage II and IV) disease.[1] This finding is especially notable in light of what we know today about the mechanism of action of cimetidine.

In 1994, a study was performed that demonstrated that just seven days of treatment with cimetidine (five days pre-operative and two days post-operative) decreased the three-year mortality rate from 41% to 7% in colorectal cancer patients. Another observation was that the tumors from the treated patients had a significantly higher rate of infiltration by lymphocytes.[2] These tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) are a good prognostic indicator because they are part of the body's immune response to the tumor. With more TIL present, the body is more capable of attacking and eliminating the tumor. These observations led the scientific community to hypothesize that cimetidine functioned by augmenting the immune response to cancer in some fashion.

The latest study published in the British Journal of Cancer, January, 2002, was conducted through the collaboration of 15 institutions in Japan. After surgery to remove the primary tumor followed by IV Mitomycin chemotherapy, all patients were given either 200 mg of oral 5-FU or 200 mg of 5-FU with 800 mg of oral cimetidine daily for 12 consecutive months. The patients were followed for 10 years. The study showed a more than three-fold improvement in 10-year
survival of Dukes C colon cancer patients who were given cimetidine. Interestingly, the less aggressive forms of colon cancer (Duke A or B) did not respond as remarkably to the addition of cimetidine in this study as the more aggressive Dukes C.[3]

How cimetidine works

Cimetidine is a competitive inhibitor of the histamine receptors on the cells of the stomach that secret acid. It binds to these receptors, called H2 receptors, and doesn't allow histamine to bind. Histamine is responsible for signaling these cells to secrete acid. If cimetidine is present, the cells don't get the signal to produce acid thus reducing the pH of the stomach.

How Colon Cancer Patients Can Determine If Cimetidine Will Be Effective For Them

Colon cancer patients should ask that their tumor specimen be sent to a laboratory to determine the Lewis antigen expression of the cancer cells.

Lewis X and Lewis A antigens are cell surface ligands on cancer cells that adhere to a molecule found in blood vessels called E-selectin. The adhering of cancer cells to E-selectin on a blood vessel wall initiates the metastatic process.

In one study, approximately 70% of colon cancers examined expressed high levels of these Lewis antigens.* Other cancers such as breast and pancreatic have been demonstrated to express these Lewis antigens also.

Since cimetidine inhibits the expression of E-selectin in blood vessels, cancer cells in the bloodstream that express Lewis X or Lewis A antigens can't bind to the blood vessels and establish a metastatic tumor. These cells are instead eventually eliminated.

In order to determine the Lewis antigen expression of your cancer cells, contact:

IMPATH Laboratories
521 West 57th Street
New York, NY 10019
Phone: 1-800-447-5816

* Matsumoto S, Imaeda Y, Umemoto S, Kobayashi K, Suzuki H, Okamoto T. Cimetidine increases survival of colorectal cancer patients with high levels of sialyl Lewis-X and sialyl Lewis-A epitope expression on tumour cells. Brit J Can 2002 (86) 161-167.


Cimetidine has been in use to treat gastric disorders since 1975. Prior to the advent of stronger anti-emetics, this drug was also prescribed to treat the nausea associated with chemotherapy. In 1988 it was observed that colon cancer patients who had been treated with cimetidine had a significantly better response than those who had not received the drug. Many hypotheses were offered to explain this phenomenon. Since cimetidine is a histamine receptor antagonist, it was suggested that the actions were mediated by this mechanism.

Histamine is also one of the compounds the body secretes to inhibit an immune response. Histamine can be released in the tumor environment and act to suppress the immune response that the body may mount to attack a tumor. If cimetidine inhibited this suppression, then the immune
system may be able to build up a more effective response to the tumor and the cancer could be attacked by the immune system. This may be one of the mechanisms through which cimetidine works, however, other H2-blockers (ranitidine for example) that are stronger than cimetidine do not demonstrate this effect to the same degree as cimetidine.

It was postulated that cimetidine may exert an effect on the ability of cancer cells to metastasize. Indeed, it was recently found that cimetidine does inhibit the ability of cancer cells to attach to vascular endothelium. It was then discovered that cimetidine inhibits the expression of E-selectin (ELAM-1) which is one of the molecules in blood vessels that cancer cells adhere to using their own cell surface ligands, Lewis X and Lewis A.4 These are carbohydrate groups on the surface on certain cancer cells that allow them to bind to E-selectin.

Since cimetidine inhibits the expression of E-selectin in blood vessels, cancer cells that are in the bloodstream can't bind to the blood vessels and establish a metastatic tumor. Instead they are eventually eliminated. This would obviously lead to a much better outcome for the patient. Indeed, patients with aggressive colon cancer (Dukes grade C) had a remarkable 84.6% ten year survival rate when treated with cimetidine for one year after surgery compared to a 23.1% ten year survival rate for patients that were not treated with cimetidine as an adjuvant therapy.[3]

Cimetidine as an immunomodulator

While it has been observed that histamine is a growth factor for certain cancers and can, by itself, stimulate these cells to proliferate[5], it does not seem that the inhibition of this histamine action that cimetidine causes is primarily responsible for its efficacy.[6] There are, however, many indications that cimetidine has an effect on the immune system and the ability of the body to respond to a tumor.


Since cimetidine inhibits the expression of E-selectin in blood vessels, cancer cells that are in the bloodstream can't bind to the blood vessels and establish a metastatic tumor and are eventually eliminated. This would obviously lead to a much better outcome for the patient.
Pictured: molecular expression of cimetidine.

In 1972, it was discovered that T suppressor cells, which are part of the regulatory arm of the immune system, express receptors for histamine on their surface.[7] T suppressor cells have been demonstrated to accelerate the growth of tumors. It was also demonstrated that histamine was capable of suppressing the immune response by activating these T suppressor cells.[8] Many tumors, particularly colorectal cancers, secrete histamine resulting in elevated histamine levels within the tumor. Histamine is also often secreted in response to surgical resection of colorectal cancers and significant immunosuppression ensues from this and other factors.

Several studies have shown that administration of H2 antagonists inhibit this immune suppression.[9-11] During surgery, some cancer cells may be released into the blood stream and a suppressed immune system may contribute to their ability to escape immune surveillance and establish metastatic lesions. If the immune system is suppressed, these cells stand a better chance of becoming tumors.

In addition, many tumors are infiltrated with lymphocytes as a part of the immune response. These tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) are associated with a better prognosis than tumors lacking in TIL.[12] Administration of cimetidine significantly elevated the proportion of colorectal cancers with TIL, probably by inhibiting the suppressive function of histamine.[13] In addition to the presence of TIL, the ability of peripheral lymphocytes to kill tumor cells is associated with enhanced disease free survival.[14] Post-operative administration of cimetidine may enhance the function of these cells as well.

Cimetidine interferes with metastasis

Adhesion molecules are expressed on the surface of many different cell types to facilitate their adhering to other cells. These molecules play a critical role in many different biological processes including wound healing, the immune response and cancer metastasis.

Cells circulating in the blood must have a mechanism by which they can stop circulating, bind to the cells in the area of interest and perform their various functions. For a lymphocyte, this means that it has the ability to travel to a site of infection or a wound and stop there to perform its immunological functions. Similarly, for a cancer cell to bind and proliferate in an area, it must first adhere to the inside of a blood vessel. One of these adhesion molecules that are present on blood vessels is called E-selectin. Several types of cancer cells use carbohydrate moieties called Lewis antigens to bind to E-selectin. It was recently discovered that cimetidine can block the expression of E-selectin and inhibit cancer cell adhesion in vitro and can inhibit the metastasis of liver cancer in a nude mouse model. This mechanism of action seems to be independent of the ability of cimetidine to block the H2 receptor.[4]


The beneficial effects of cimetidine in the treatment of colon cancer are well documented. These effects probably arise from the multiple actions of cimetidine as an H2 receptor antagonist, an immunomodulator and as an inhibitor of adhesion molecule expression, but it is still not approved by the FDA for use in these diseases.

After this discovery was made, one researcher went back to look at the Lewis antigen expression in tumors which were resected from patients that had been treated with cimetidine. From 1990 to 1992, 64 patients were enrolled in a study to examine the effects of cimetidine. Patients were treated for one year after surgery with 5-fluorouracil and cimetidine or 5-fluorouracil alone. In a recently published summary of that study, the results are truly remarkable. Overall, the 10-year survival rate for the cimetidine treated group was 84.6%. The group 10-year survival rate of the group that received 5-fluorouracil alone was 49.8%. When the tumors were analyzed for Lewis antigen expression, those patients who had tumors with the Lewis antigen and were treated with cimetidine had an average survival rate of 90.7% compared to 33.7% for those that were not treated with cimetidine. For those patients whose tumors did not express the Lewis antigens, there was no significant difference between cimetidine treated and untreated. However, approximately 70% of the tumors in this study did express the Lewis antigen.[3]

Conclusion

The beneficial effects of cimetidine in the treatment of colon cancer are well documented. These effects probably arise from the multiple actions of cimetidine as an H2 receptor antagonist, an immunomodulator and as an inhibitor of adhesion molecule expression, but it is not yet approved by the FDA for use in these diseases. Since cimetidine's effect was not studied without the inclusion of another drug (5-FU), it is unclear if the effect is additive or synergistic. The proven mechanisms of action of cimetidine suggest that alone it would significantly alter the ability of certain colon cancers to grow and metastasize, however, further studies should be done to evaluate and document the efficacy of cimetidine on its own.

Clearly, cimetidine has a place in the treatment of colorectal cancer whether it be on its own or as an adjuvant medication. In 2001, there were 135,000 cases of newly diagnosed cancer of the colon and rectum and 56,700 deaths from these cancers.[15] If these patients had the knowledge to take 800 mg each night of cimetidine, many of them might still be alive today.

Note: Tagamet® is no longer the drug of choice for gastric ulceration or esophageal reflux (heartburn). Esophageal reflux is better treated with a class of drugs called proton pump inhibitors that completely block stomach acid production (ie: Prolisec®, Prevacid®, Nexium®) while most stomach ulcers can be healed with antibiotic therapy that kills the H-pylori bacteria.

Note: If you wish to take cimetidine you should notify your physician. The drug interacts with several other medications to either increase or decrease their potency. Some of these medications include digoxin, theophylline, phenytoin, warfarin and lidocaine.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

References

1. Tonnesen H, Knigge U, Bulow S, Damm P, Fischerman K, Hesselfeldt P, Hjortrup A, Pedersen IK, Pedersen VM, Siemssen OJ. Effect of cimetidine on survival after gastric cancer. Lancet 1988 Oct 29;2(8618):990-2.

2. Adams WJ, Morris DL. Short-course cimetidine and survival with colorectal cancer. Lancet. 1994 Dec 24-31;344(8939-8940):1768-9.

3. Matsumoto S, Imaeda Y, Umemoto S, Kobayashi K, Suzuki H, Okamoto T. Cimetidine increases survival of colorectal cancer patients with high levels of sialyl Lewis-X and sialyl Lewis-A epitope expression on tumour cells. Brit J Can 2002 (86) 161-167.

4. Kobayashi K, Matsumoto S, Morishima T, Kawabe T, Okamoto T. Cimetidine inhibits cancer cell adhesion to endothelial cells and prevents metastasis by blocking E-selectin expression. Cancer Res. 2000 Jul 15;60(14):3978-84.

5. Adams WJ, Lawson JA, Morris DL. Cimetidine inhibits in vivo growth of human colon cancer and reverses histamine stimulated in vitro and in vivo growth. Gut 1994 Nov;35(11):1632-6.

6. Siegers CP, Hiltl DM, Stich R. Cimetidine hemmt das Tumorzellwachstum. Therapie-woche. 1995 (36) 2110-2114.

7. Melmon KL, Bourne HR, Weinstein Y, Sela MD. Receptors for histamine can be detected on the surface of selected leukocytes. Science 1972 (177) 707.

8. Rocklin RE, Greineder DK, Melmon KL. Histamine induced suppressor factor (HSF) Further studies on the nature of the stimulus and the cell which produces it. Cell Immunol 1979 (44) 404-415.

9. Hansbrough J, Zapata-Sirvent R, Bender E. Prevention of alterations in postoperative lymphocyte subpopulations by cimetidine and ibuprofen. Am. J surg 1986 151, 249-255.

10. Adams W. Cimetidine preserves immune function after colonic resection of cancer. Aust. NZ J. Surg 1994 64, 847-852.

11. Adams WJ, Lawson JA, Nicholson SE, Cook TA, Morris DL. The growth of carcinogen-induced colon cancer in rats is inhibited by cimetidine. Eur J Surg Oncol 1993 Aug;19 (4):332-5.

12. Harrison JC, Dean PJ, El-Zeky F, Vander Zwaag R. From Dukes through Jass: Pathological prognostic indicators in rectal cancer. Hum. Path. 1994 (25) 495-498.

13. Morris DL, Adams WJ. Cimetidine and colorectal cancer-old drug, new use? Nat Med. 1995 Dec;1(12):1243-4.

14. Uchida A. Biological significance of autologous tumour killing activity and its induction therapy. Cancer Immun. Immunother 1993 (37) 75-83.

15. American Cancer Society website - Statistics section.
 

duchess47

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Thanks for the information you are posting.

And a FWIW on Cimetidine. Several years ago I had a mare with a large melanoma on her neck. The vet took out a fist sized tumor but didn't hold a lot of hope since fingers of the tumor had attached to her neck and spine. He figured she would last another three weeks and hoped he could keep her alive three months. He prescribed Cimetidine powder as part of her treatment. This was in 1999. She is still alive, doing outstanding, and part of the broodmare band of a large farm in KC.
 

sandra

Inactive
Yep, not surprised at all.... again back to the 30's when they found out that cancer cannot live in an alkaline invironment... and the Dr. who discovered this got a nobel prize at the time.... but.... cancer is big money in this country.
 

expose'

The Pulse......
Tagamet works as an anti-angiogenesis...(I hope I've been spelling that correctly..)

It stops the cancer from producing it's own blood vessels. Cancer will produce these vessels to feed off of and to spread... Tagamet is one of those meds that helps to cut off the food supply to the cancer....

I'm not sure if it also has a PH altering effect. I know that Zantac - another ant-acid type of med like tagamet - doesn't seem to work on cancer like tagamet does...so it has to be a mechanism other than raising the PH...Otherwise - both meds would work.
 

DustMusher

Inactive
OMG! I thought this was common knowledge -- we have been using it for cancer in dogs for years. Most of the dogs put on cimetidine after cancer surgery live long enough to die from something else -- not the cancer.

We started using it with Melanomas -- very agressive type of cancer -- and it now is a standard of care.

Tess, my old dog who I recenty lost, had a baseball sized hemangicarcinoma <sp?> removed from her chest -- she ended up passing from the effects of old age at 16y 9 m 5 1/2 years after the cancer surgery.

DM
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
Yep

First off with humans I would advise a diet with lots of green vegetables and other alkaline foods and keep your meat and other acid forming foods to about 100 grams a day. Here in China there are forms of bone powder for sale which are good to add to one's diet. However having said that I start my day with rolled oats which are acid but I thrown in the bone powder to balance. Oats are great for fiber.

............................................................................................................................

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cider

Contributing Member
When my DD was 13 she had a bunch of plantars warts on her foot. The podiatrist I took her to first tried burning them but then he gave her Tagamet. They went away very quickly. He said it only works in young patients, like under 18. When my 18 year old DS got them he did not perscribe it. Not cancer but another use for the same drug.
 

expose'

The Pulse......
what's the average dosage?

I believe I've read that the standard dosages for cancer are the same as for stomach upset..

200 to 800 mg per day...?:shr:
Tagamet is sold in 200 mg tablets..
 

TIK

Inactive
See...this is the thing...and I don't know if I'm going to get in trouble for saying this. But I sure find it freakin' ODD that I have to read about this on a DISCUSSION FORUM, which is one of a gazillion discussion forums out there. In my line of thinking, this should be FRONT PAGE BOLDED BIG FONT HEADLINE NEWS!

Or am I just all wet?
 

duchess47

Has No Life - Lives on TB
See...this is the thing...and I don't know if I'm going to get in trouble for saying this. But I sure find it freakin' ODD that I have to read about this on a DISCUSSION FORUM, which is one of a gazillion discussion forums out there. In my line of thinking, this should be FRONT PAGE BOLDED BIG FONT HEADLINE NEWS!

Or am I just all wet?

Just think of all the money the medical community would lose if it were common knowledge. I have always found it odd though - since it's pretty common knowledge and in use in the vet community. If you do a google search on cimedine you'll even find articles from medical journals and information on trials.
 

expose'

The Pulse......
I am taking one a day as a prophalactic. An ounce of prevention....

I wouldn't do that...

Tagamet is a drug and it can have side effects. It wouldn't be advisable to use it daily unless you have chronic heartburn or indigestion...or cancer.

I posted this thread last Spring and someone brought it up again today because of another cancer thread.

If you'd like to know more about research with Tagamet and cancer - try searching under Cimetidine and cancer. Cimetidine is Tagamets pharmaceutical name.
 

Wingie

Inactive
Please be careful with Tagamet. It interacts with a lot of other medications and makes them useless (high blood pressure medications, diabetes medications, heart medications, antidepressants, and lots of others). Please check with your physician before starting it.
 

Michigan Majik

FreeSpirit, with attitude
OMG! I thought this was common knowledge -- we have been using it for cancer in dogs for years. Most of the dogs put on cimetidine after cancer surgery live long enough to die from something else -- not the cancer.

We started using it with Melanomas -- very agressive type of cancer -- and it now is a standard of care.

Tess, my old dog who I recenty lost, had a baseball sized hemangicarcinoma <sp?> removed from her chest -- she ended up passing from the effects of old age at 16y 9 m 5 1/2 years after the cancer surgery.

DM
Did you give it to the dogs in pill form? What dosage?
This is amazing news Expose'. Thanks so much !
 

NC Susan

Deceased
Does anyone know how much Tagament is needed per day?


[FONT=Verdana,Arial]cimetidine has a place in the treatment of colorectal cancer whether it be on its own or as an adjuvant medication. In 2001, there were 135,000 cases of newly diagnosed cancer of the colon and rectum and 56,700 deaths from these cancers.[15] If these patients had the knowledge to take 800 mg each night of cimetidine, many of them might still be alive today[/FONT]







yeah, too bad a news forums expose has to bring this up, as its now 15 years after the study published the results.
So how many cancer victims were there, cuz this study never made it to the front pages of the newspaper, or the doctors office?

If I get sick, please take me to my vet!
 

NC Susan

Deceased
Please be careful with Tagamet. It interacts with a lot of other medications and makes them useless (high blood pressure medications, diabetes medications, heart medications, antidepressants, and lots of others). Please check with your physician before starting it.

wrong info.....a doc doesnt know anything other than what a drug rep tells him.

If you want drug info, go to a pro. See a pharmacist. Every drug store has one, and a good pharmacist will tell you that they have 8 - 16 years of schooling where a medical doctor only needs a few semesters of chemistry and pharmacology.
 

Laurane

Canadian Loonie
Lots of ways to keep your body alkaline.....

just eat lots of non-sugary fruits and veggies - 1/4 tsp of baking soda in a cup of water occasionally will help, lime or lemon juice in a glass of water once or twice a day, works.

You don't need to take any drugs to do this......just put alkaline forming foods (google it) and use a parasite cleanse a couple of times a year......remember your mother giving you castor oil - that worked the same way.
 

sis

Deceased
TIK

Last April when expose' first posted this thread I copied the report and took it to a cancer specialist in Grand Rapids and asked him about the Tagemet treatment for cancer. He said the information was old and the treatment hasn't panned out so he doesn't recommend it. So I guess that's the 'official' line and probably why we haven't heard much about the info. :shr:

[I had forgotten this until tonight when DH reminded me. The old gray mare's memory, it ain't what it used to be.]
 

Herbmountain

Inactive
That's fantastic Expose. I have always been of the mind the acidic body is the perfect body for cancer to grow and live. It is the alkaline body we need to maintain health. For that reason hubby and I stay on spirulina/chlorella caps each day. I made them up. It is much less expensive this way.
 

cjoi

Veteran Member
See...this is the thing...and I don't know if I'm going to get in trouble for saying this. But I sure find it freakin' ODD that I have to read about this on a DISCUSSION FORUM, which is one of a gazillion discussion forums out there. In my line of thinking, this should be FRONT PAGE BOLDED BIG FONT HEADLINE NEWS!

Or am I just all wet?


Oh! Silly Tik!:groucho: Those of us who've been forced to do our own research into therapies that work without horrible side-effects, have learned that MSMedicine actively suppresses therapies that don't make BigPhARMA rich.:groucho: :)
 

sis

Deceased
Here is a newer article from Life Extension magazine, dated May 2007
http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2007/may2007_report_cimetidine_01.htm


Conclusion
Cimetidine’s beneficial effects in helping to manage various cancers are well documented. For more than 20 years, scientists have accumulated evidence that this low-cost, readily available heartburn remedy fights cancer via several mechanisms of action, including blocking the immunosuppressive action of histamine, modulating the body’s immune response, inhibiting angiogenesis, stimulating cancer cell death, and inhibiting cancer metastasis.

Cimetidine has not yet been approved by the FDA for use in treating cancer, and it remains unclear how its effects may enhance or synergize with other cancer treatments. However, cimetidine’s demonstrated effects suggest that it may markedly suppress the ability of certain cancers—particularly colorectal cancers—to grow and metastasize, even when used as a sole therapy. Further studies are needed to evaluate and document cimetidine’s efficacy both alone and in concert with other cancer-fighting regimens.


And from http://www.townsendletter.com/July2003/LTRmartin0703.htm

In 1926 doctors were not reading medical journals and that seems to have changed but little today. Doctors today learn medicine from the sales people of the major drug firms and from little else. I will give a few examples:

See my letter in the TLfDP in the April 2000 issue on the anticancer effect of cimetidine. Cimetidine is a wonderful drug for cancer treatment. Smith Klein had done most of the work to find the anticancer effect of cimetidine but when the patent on it ran out, Smith Klein shut up like a clam and will do nothing to foster cimetidine for cancer treatment. There is absolutely no use for this wonderful drug in cancer treatment. There are now about 20,000,000 patients, worldwide taking cimetidine for stomach distress and this may be having the effect of reducing cancer among them.

I will not review all that I have in my letter in that issue in 2000. I will review a bit of it: The first indication of the anticancer effect of cimetidine was from the University of Nebraska and reported in The Lancet in 1979 (i p 822-3). It reported on two patients with lung cancer. Both were given cimetidine for stomach distress. Both had dramatic complete remissions from cancer. In one patient, the lung cancer was a metastasis from a squamous cell carcinoma on the neck. The lung metastasis was most aggressive. The patient was given cimetidine, 1,200mg a day. Almost at once there was a regression of the lung metastasis. The patient was maintained on cimetidine, 600mg a day and one year later, the tumor could no longer be detected.

A second patient had a brain metastasis from a non-small cell carcinoma primary of the lung. The patient was given steroids for the brain tumor and cimetidine 600 mg a day. Very soon after she was given cimetidine, the lung tumor decreased in size. The brain tumor was removed by surgery and one year later the lung tumor no longer could be detected. The patient was continued on cimetidine at 600 mg a day.

The authors said that there was no indication in the medical literature that cimetidine is an anticancer drug but there was no doubt in their minds that cimetidine was responsible for these two remarkable remissions of lung cancer.

By 1982 it was understood that cimetidine inhibits T-suppressor cells and helps to liberate our cancer-killing lymphocytes. A report from Ireland was in The Lancet, 1982 (11, p 328), of the treatment of four melanoma patients: All were far advanced with metastases in the internal organs, in the lungs and liver. One young man had severe stomach distress, with many tumors. He was given cimetidine, 1,000 mg a day and almost at once he had regressions of his many tumors. In two weeks' time, he was able to return to work.

At this time, their other three patients were given cimetidine, 1,000mg a day. Two of them had dramatic remissions of cancer. One patient was not helped and died. All these patients were tested for T suppressor cell counts. All had their T suppressor cells decreased by cimetidine. All four of these patients were being maintained on coumarin. There had been no benefit from coumarin although the doctors there thought that coumarin may have acted with cimetidine to produce these remissions.

Then there was a report in the NEJM in 1983, vol. 308, pp 591-2. The report was from Sweden. Here, six melanoma patients were being treated with interferon. There was no benefit. These patients all had cimetidine added to treatment and there were some exceptional results. There were two complete remissions. One patient had a partial remission. With a fourth patient, progression was stopped. With two patients, there was no benefit.

It is in the area of colorectal cancer that there is a pressing need for treatment with cimetidine. During a major surgery, there is a vast increase in T suppressor cells which is highly immunosuppressive at a time when cancer surgery may be sending a shower of cancer cells in the blood to all parts of the body.

A trial on cimetidine during surgery for colorectal cancer was done in Australia and reported in The Lancet in the December 31, 1994 issue pp 1768-9. Cimetidine was given for seven days only at the time of the surgery. The results were utterly astounding. At three years the survival of the patients who got cimetidine was 93%.Of the ones who got no cimetidine, the survival was only 59%. One could surmise that this treatment might be of great benefit in surgery for other kinds of cancer.

There was a trial in Japan reported in The Lancet in the July 8, 1995 issue, p 115. Here the patients having surgery for colorectal cancer did not get cimetidine during the critical seven days at the time of surgery when there was a surge of T suppressor cells. In this Japanese trial, the patients were not given cimetidine until two weeks after the surgery.

Cimetidine has anticancer effects other than the suppression of T suppressor cells. In the Australian study, more of the cancer cell killing lymphocyte entered the tumors, 63% in the ones who got cimetidine and only 24% in the controls. Cimetidine also inhibits histamine which is also immunosuppressive and may be a tumor growth factor.

In the Japanese study, all patients at two weeks after surgery were given 5 fluorouracil, 150mg a day. Half of the patients received 800mg a day of cimetidine. This treatment lasted for one year after surgery. The results were even better than in the Australian study. In this study, rectal cancers and colon cancers were reported separately. Among the rectal cancer patients, 100% of those getting cimetidine survived, whereas only 53.3% of those survived who were not given cimetidine. Among the colon cancer patients, survival among the patients given cimetidine was 96.3%. The survival of the colon cancer patients who were not given cimetidine was 68%.

We will have in the USA this year over 50,000 deaths from colorectal cancer. The implication of these two trials is that if all patients in the USA having surgery for colorectal cancer were given cimetidine at 800mg a day from one week before surgery until one year following surgery, deaths from colorectal cancer could drop from the present 50,000 plus to less than 20,000 a year.

These two studies were reported in 1994 and 1995. It is doubtful in the past seven years if there has been a single patient to have surgery for colorectal cancer who was given cimetidine. This supports my contention that doctors now do not read medical journals.
 
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expose'

The Pulse......
Wow Expose, I'm glad we have these little talks.

;)

Well...The Lord works in mysterious ways Father Mike...:D (He lets you run up those stairs for me for instance..:eek: and for that I am so grateful! ..)

How could any of these positive things be possible without Him?
 

sis

Deceased
I checked with my doctor and asked her if I could start taking 200 mg of Tagamet at bedtime for my condition. She said she has heard good things about Tagamet. She added that while taking Tagamet I need to take Betaine with each meal. She recommended one capsule per meal of a supplement containing 496 mg of Betaine [from 650 mg Betaine HCl] and 140 mg of Pepsin.
 

DustMusher

Inactive
See...this is the thing...and I don't know if I'm going to get in trouble for saying this. But I sure find it freakin' ODD that I have to read about this on a DISCUSSION FORUM, which is one of a gazillion discussion forums out there. In my line of thinking, this should be FRONT PAGE BOLDED BIG FONT HEADLINE NEWS!

Or am I just all wet?


The use of Tagamet for dogs is promoted by Texas A&M Vet school and I there are several papers published on the subject.

DM
 

rmagee58

Inactive
When my DD was 13 she had a bunch of plantars warts on her foot. The podiatrist I took her to first tried burning them but then he gave her Tagamet. They went away very quickly. He said it only works in young patients, like under 18. When my 18 year old DS got them he did not perscribe it. Not cancer but another use for the same drug.

I just bought some of this for my 15 year old to try for warts, how much should he take?
 

Wingie

Inactive
Source: http://www.medicinenet.com

Medication Written by Pharmacists Reviewed by Doctors

Pharmacy Editor: Jay W. Marks, MD
GENERIC NAME: cimetidine
BRAND NAME: Tagamet

DRUG CLASS AND MECHANISM: Cimetidine belongs to a class of medications called histamine H2-antagonists. Histamine is a natural chemical that stimulates stomach cells to produce acid. Histamine H2-antagonists inhibit the action of histamine on the acid-producing cells of the stomach and reduce stomach acid. Cimetidine was approved by the FDA in 1977.

PRESCRIPTION: Yes

GENERIC AVAILABLE: Yes

PREPARATIONS: Tablets: 200, 300, 400, and 800 mg. Liquid: 300 mg/5 mL. Injection: 150 mg/mL.

STORAGE: Store at room temperature 15-30°C (59-86°F).

PRESCRIBED FOR: Cimetidine is used for the treatment of duodenal ulcers, active gastric ulcers, gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), pathological hypersecretory conditions (e.g., Zollinger Ellison syndrome), heartburn and the prevention of gastrointestinal bleeding.

DOSING:

* Duodenal ulcers are treated with 800 mg at bedtime, 300 mg 4 times a day at meal times and bedtime, or 400 mg twice a day for 4-6 weeks. Maintenance therapy is 400 mg at bedtime.
* Active gastric ulcers are treated with 800 mg at bedtime or 300 mg 4 times a day at meal times and bedtime for up to 8 weeks.
* The regimen for GERD is 800 mg twice a day or 400 mg 4 times a day for 12 weeks.
* Pathological hypersecretory conditions are treated with 300 mg 4 times daily up to 2400 mg daily.
* Heartburn, indigestion and sour stomach may be treated with 200 mg once or twice daily and may be administered up to 30 minutes before ingestion of food or beverages that may cause heart burn.
* For hospitalized patients who cannot take oral medications, 300 mg of cimetidine may be administered by intravenous or intramuscular injection every 6-8 hours. A continuous intravenous infusion of 37.5 to 50 mg/hour also may be used.

DRUG INTERACTIONS: Cimetidine may increase the blood levels of several drugs by reducing their elimination by the liver. This interaction may occur between cimetidine and warfarin (Coumadin), a commonly used blood thinning agent. Patients taking both medications should have frequent blood monitoring to avoid accumulation of high levels of warfarin leading to excessive blood thinning and bleeding. Cimetidine also may increase the blood levels phenytoin, theophylline, lidocaine, amiodarone, metronidazole, loratadine, calcium channel blockers (e.g., diltiazem, felodipine, nifedipine), bupropion, carbamazepine and fluvastatin. Because cimetidine reduces stomach acid, it may reduce the absorption of drugs (e.g., ketoconazole) that are best absorbed in acidic conditions. Such drugs should be administered at least 2 hours before the administration of cimetidine.

PREGNANCY: There are no adequate studies of cimetidine in pregnant women.

NURSING MOTHERS: Cimetidine is excreted in breast milk.

SIDE EFFECTS: Side effects due to cimetidine are rare and generally reversible once the medication is stopped. Minor side effects include constipation, diarrhea, fatigue, headache, insomnia, muscle pain, nausea, and vomiting. Major side effects include confusion and hallucinations (usually in elderly or critically ill patients); enlargement of the breasts; impotence (usually seen in patients on high doses for prolonged periods); decreased white blood cell counts. Other side effects include irregular heartbeat, impotence, rash, visual changes, allergic reactions, and hepatitis.

Check with a medical professional (physician, nurse, pharmacist, nurse practitioner, clinical nurse specialist, physician assistant) before starting any medication.
 
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