Publication | Closed Access
Regression of Head and Neck Carcinoma With a Prostaglandin-Synthesis Inhibitor
135
Citations
17
References
1981
Year
Tumor BiologyAnti-inflammatoryOncologyChemoprevention StrategyTumor ShrinkageMedicineVivo AdministrationPathologyHead And Neck CancerPharmacotherapyNeck CarcinomaCancer TreatmentNeck OncologyProstaglandin ProductionPharmacologyRadiation OncologyAnti-cancer AgentCancer Research
The in vivo administration of a prostaglandin-synthetase inhibitor inhibited or reduced tumor growth in cancer patients and experimental animals. Indomethacin, a prostaglandin-synthetase inhibitor and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agent commonly used in the management of arthritic patients, acted as an immune adjuvant by decreasing the production of prostaglandins. Seven cases demonstrated that indomethacin taken in the usually recommended dosages causes regression and stabilization of head and neck cancer. The following factors were also considered in this study: prostaglandin production, a survey of other reports of solid neoplasm response to prostaglandin-synthetase inhibitor administration, drug toxicity, irradiation therapy and metastases, the need for tumor biopsy, and the role that reduction in inflammation plays in tumor shrinkage.
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