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Go to NIH.gov and type in "Ivermectin cancer" in the search bar

Posted on 4/11/22 at 6:09 pm
Posted by stout
Porte du Lafitte
Member since Sep 2006
175901 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 6:09 pm
These are all from different studies

quote:

Ivermectin has powerful antitumor effects, including the inhibition of proliferation, metastasis, and angiogenic activity, in a variety of cancer cells. This may be related to the regulation of multiple signaling pathways by ivermectin through PAK1 kinase. On the other hand, ivermectin promotes programmed cancer cell death, including apoptosis, autophagy and pyroptosis. Ivermectin induces apoptosis and autophagy is mutually regulated. Interestingly, ivermectin can also inhibit tumor stem cells and reverse multidrug resistance and exerts the optimal effect when used in combination with other chemotherapy drugs.


quote:

SILAC-based quantitative proteomics found the protein expression levels of EIF4A3 and 116 EIF4A3-binding mRNAs were inhibited by ivermectin in OC cells.


quote:

The breast MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-468, and MCF-7, and the ovarian SKOV-3, were the most sensitive cancer cell lines to ivermectin. Conversely, the prostate cancer cell line DU145 was the most resistant to its use. In the most sensitive cells, ivermectin induced cell cycle arrest at G0-G1 phase, with modulation of proteins associated with cell cycle control. Furthermore, ivermectin was synergistic with docetaxel, cyclophosphamide and tamoxifen. Ivermectin reduced both cell viability and colony formation capacity in the stem cell-enriched population as compared with the parental one. Finally, in tumor-bearing mice ivermectin successfully reduced both tumor size and weight.


quote:

Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is the most aggressive type of genitourinary cancer and highly resistant to current available therapies. In this work, we investigated the effects and mechanism of anti-parasitic agent ivermectin in RCC. We show that ivermectin significantly inhibits proliferation and induces apoptosis in multiple RCC cell lines that represent different histological subtypes and various mutation status. Importantly, ivermectin is significantly less or ineffective in normal kidney cells compared with RCC cells, demonstrating the preferential toxicity of ivermectin to RCC. Ivermectin also significantly inhibits RCC tumor growth in vivo. Mechanistically, ivermectin induces mitochondrial dysfunction via decreasing mitochondrial membrane potential, mitochondrial respiration and ATP production. As a consequence of mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress and damage is detected in ivermectin treated RCC cells and xenograft mouse model. The rescue of ivermectin's effect by acetyl-l-Carnitine (ALCAR, a mitochondrial fuel) or antioxidant N-acetyl-l-cysteine (NAC) confirms mitochondria as the target of ivermectin in RCC cells. Compared to normal kidney cells, RCC cells have higher mitochondrial mass and respiration, and ATP production, which might explain the preferential toxicity of ivermectin to RCC. Our work suggest that ivermectin is a promising candidate for RCC treatment and targeting mitochondrial metabolism is an alternative therapeutic strategy for RCC.


quote:

Our results determined that ivermectin significantly inhibited the proliferation of ESCC cells in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, we found that ivermectin markedly mediated mitochondrial dysfunction and induced apoptosis of ESCC cells, which indicated the anti-proliferative effect of ivermectin on ESCC cells was implicated in mitochondrial apoptotic pathway. Mechanistically, ivermectin significantly triggered ROS accumulation and inhibited the activation of NF-?B signaling pathway and increased the ratio of Bax/Bcl-2.



quote:

We show that treatment with the FDA-approved anti-parasitic drug ivermectin induces immunogenic cancer cell death (ICD) and robust T cell infiltration into breast tumors. As an allosteric modulator of the ATP/P2X4/P2X7 axis which operates in both cancer and immune cells, ivermectin also selectively targets immunosuppressive populations including myeloid cells and Tregs, resulting in enhanced Teff/Tregs ratio. While neither agent alone showed efficacy in vivo, combination therapy with ivermectin and checkpoint inhibitor anti-PD1 antibody achieved synergy in limiting tumor growth (p = 0.03) and promoted complete responses (p < 0.01), also leading to immunity against contralateral re-challenge with demonstrated anti-tumor immune responses. Going beyond primary tumors, this combination achieved significant reduction in relapse after neoadjuvant (p = 0.03) and adjuvant treatment (p < 0.001), and potential cures in metastatic disease (p < 0.001). Statistical modeling confirmed bona fide synergistic activity in both the adjuvant (p = 0.007) and metastatic settings (p < 0.001). Ivermectin has dual immunomodulatory and ICD-inducing effects in breast cancer, converting cold tumors hot, thus represents a rational mechanistic partner with checkpoint blockade.


And many more


That's some amazing "horse paste"
Posted by ksayetiger
Centenary Gents
Member since Jul 2007
69748 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 6:25 pm to
Posted by civilag08
Member since Feb 2011
823 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 6:25 pm to
It is one of many things that didn't need to be politicized, but served to divide people unnecessarily.
Posted by SDVTiger
Cabo San Lucas
Member since Nov 2011
88164 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 6:27 pm to
Posted by udtiger
Over your left shoulder
Member since Nov 2006
108392 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 6:29 pm to
quote:

That's some amazing "horse paste"


Ain't it though?
Posted by reverendotis
the jawbone of an arse
Member since Nov 2007
4907 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 6:30 pm to
quote:

That's some amazing "horse paste"


Fun fact : NIH actually stands for National Institute of Horses
Posted by amgslg
Member since Jun 2014
350 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 6:45 pm to
There’s actually an entire community of people out there who firmly believe fenbendazole cures cancer. It’s a dog dewormer in the same family as ivermectin. I joined the facebook group in case someone I know gets cancer so that I could share the info with them, and it’s very persuasive.

The protocol was “discovered” so to speak by a guy named Joe Tippens. Here’s his website. He doesn’t sell anything or make a profit from the products he used — he’s simply trying to share the info. The facebook group goes by the same name.

LINK
Posted by SpicyStacy
stout's fave
Member since Aug 2010
13344 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 7:11 pm to
Type "fenbendazole and cancer" too


Posted by Dominus5150
Member since Aug 2020
357 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 7:13 pm to
Now combine that with high dose melatonin.

Pharma screwed.

Do the same search on Pubmed.

“Melatonin Cancer”
Posted by SpicyStacy
stout's fave
Member since Aug 2010
13344 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 7:15 pm to
Mom took it. She quit doing chemo and was sent home to die. We finally decided to try it. All of her tumors were shrinking. She ended up in the hospital with an infection, and died not long after. (While she was in there her scans showed that they were shrinking.) Dr was shocked, said there's no explanation for her tumors to be shrinking. We never mentioned the fenbendazole

Wish we would've started her on it earlier.

This was my "awakening" moment
Posted by Nosevens
Member since Apr 2019
14714 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 7:19 pm to
National institute for horses asses

FIFY
Posted by NOLAManBlog
The Big Nasty
Member since Dec 2012
1200 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 7:23 pm to
"Conversely, the prostate cancer cell line DU145 was the most resistant to its use."

Sorry fellas
Posted by Figgy
CenCal
Member since May 2020
9032 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 7:24 pm to
Posted by stout
Porte du Lafitte
Member since Sep 2006
175901 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 7:36 pm to
So should humans, much like dogs, be taking a monthly dose of Ivermectin? It's one of those things that seems like it wouldn't hurt and can be very beneficial. Much like taking any other supplement.
Posted by keks tadpole
Yellow Leaf Creek
Member since Feb 2017
8201 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 7:38 pm to
quote:

Pharma screwed.

You think that the big push for vaccines vs. preventative medicine (ie Ivermectin) was to prevent the inadvertent destruction of the Oncology medical industry ($21B/year revenue in US alone)
Posted by Tantal
Member since Sep 2012
17749 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 7:38 pm to
Mrs. Tantal is Stage 4 at 44 years old. I'm going to have her ask her oncologist about this.
Posted by amgslg
Member since Jun 2014
350 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 7:54 pm to
Most patients on the fenbendazole Facebook group do not tell their doctors and do the protocol on their own. Some have been “fired” by their doctors for trying something that isn’t big pharma sponsored because it basically messes with their ability to tell whether THEIR treatment is what cures the patient. Look up the mycancerstory.rocks Facebook page.
Posted by SpicyStacy
stout's fave
Member since Aug 2010
13344 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 7:55 pm to
Don't even waste your time. Most of them are against it bc it goes against their protocol.

Yes... go read the whole blog, then it'll give u a password to access the Facebook group. Joe changes it often so that it makes ppl read it and avoids the same questions over and over. There's like 20k+ ppl in there, either on the protocol or are caregivers of ppl on it. Lots of success stories
This post was edited on 4/11/22 at 7:57 pm
Posted by SpicyStacy
stout's fave
Member since Aug 2010
13344 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 7:58 pm to
I've read that it heals all sorts of stuff, viruses, cancer, ms, etc. We took it once a week for a year during covid as a preventative. 12 year old took it too. 0 side affects.
Posted by stout
Porte du Lafitte
Member since Sep 2006
175901 posts
Posted on 4/11/22 at 8:00 pm to
Why did yall stop?

BTW, hope all is well.
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