So when I read about the Alzheimer's side effect above (which is probably an exaggeration, as 3BP was directly injected into the CNS, which would never happen except perhaps for brain or spine cancer), I nonetheless am reminded of the purportedly anticancer agent graviola (also known as soursop and in the same plant family as paw paw, another rumored cancer killer). (BTW a family friend had metastatic liver cancer a few years ago -- after being cured of colon cancer via conventional medicine -- and has been in remission ever since, apparently due to a regimen of paw paw along with a Gerson-ish diet and other therapies.) But my point here is the neurotoxicity issue: graviola can also be neurotoxic (depending on the particular dose of seed or fruit extract). This suggests to me that graviola and 3BP might be acting on related pathways, in which case, the former might be a cheaper and more accessible alternative in desperate situations. This is also unsurprising, given the recent studies (for example) demonstrating a significant anticorrelation between cancer and Alzheimer's.
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. (Here is one early encouraging result.) 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.]
Edited by resveratrol_guy, 01 February 2015 - 08:38 PM.