So as I understand it, plain vanilla IV 3BP is basically useless; one needs paracetamol to lower the glutathione antioxidant defense of the tumor cells in order to make it effective. (Organ-targetted 3BP-only therapy is potententially effective, but the delivery mechanics are obviously nontrivial, so IMO this is an impractical approach.) So it kind of sounds like 3BP causes HK2 to indirectly downregulate glycolysis. Then, robbed of half their energy, normal oxidative stress becomes an overwhelming tax on the cancer cells which are also glutathione depleted, resulting in cell death. (Not to forget salinomycin, but I'm no expert on it.) Somehow, during this process, we need to preferentially protect healthy cells. Perhaps a proapoptic agent which is also an antioxidant, such as reveratrol or pterostilbene, would be useful. c60oo (and similarly, nicotinamide riboside) might be useful as well, judging from the original Baati experiment, although it's not completely clear whether or not it would protect cancer once it had already developed, even though it appears to prevent it in the first place. Anyway, I'm just trying to think of a way to protect the patient from undue oxidative and neurological stress (nicotine? lithium? NGF eye drops?) while we fry the cancer. This isn't idle fascination; a friend of a friend of mine (not the guy above) has metastatic pancreatic cancer. I've told his wife about 3BP, for starters.
A ketogenic diet has obvious benefits, but is unpalatable to some people, even some people with cancer. (And with digestive cancers, the fat load would require increased synthetic enzyme intake, if it could be tolerated at all.)
[Mods: IMO this is "the" 3BP thread, based on internal search ranking, so I vote to keep it that way.]
The way I read the original research that I responded to, cancer upregulates the HK2 enzyme, and it uses this to increase glucose going into the damaged mitochondria that are stuck in glycolysis. The primary mechanism that explains the success of 3BP is that it downregulates HK2 in all cells. But because cancer cells are the only ones that rely on HK2 heavily for glycolysis, this ends up being a method of attack that is preferential against cancer. Downregulating HK2 in a normal cell will not kill it.
It was not clear to me that you had to have paracetamol for the effect to take place. Did you find any in vitro studies where 3BP alone did not work, but 3BP + paracetamol did?
Ketogenic diet should be an additive therapy here, as would be any other pro-oxidative therapy. Dominic D'Agostino's research shows the added benefits of hyperbaric oxygen. As a pure speculation, I am guessing that ozone injection (as practiced by Dr Shallenberger in Nevada) might have a positive effect as well, since it tends to flood the cell with oxygen and create a cascade of events that increase the NAD+/NADH ratio and speeds up aerobic metabolism.
One of the most intriguing parts of Dominic's research is his finding that a ketone ester will put a mouse into a chemically induced ketosis for hours. The esters are too expensive at this point to make commercially, but it suggests that at some point in the future it might be possible to buy an ester and spend much of the day in ketosis without the pain of a ketogenic diet.