| Literature DB >> 34769225 |
Jose Baeza-Noci1, Rosa Pinto-Bonilla1.
Abstract
In the last sixty years, publications in reputed journals have shown the preclinical positive effect of ozone gas in cancer cells. However, the translation of these results into clinical practice is far away from success. A comprehensive approach is necessary for this, and oncologists and researchers need guidance from medical specialists with in-depth knowledge of ozone in medicine. In this article, we review the evidence around this question and suggest different potential research lines to those interested in this exciting field.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; oncology; ozone therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34769225 PMCID: PMC8584016 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222111796
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1ROS generation by RT, CT, and ozone. According to previous cytoplasmic and mitochondrial ROS levels, different pathways are activated. Normal cells have a low ROS level, whereas cancer cells have high or very high ROS levels. The NRF2 pathway is almost exhausted in cancer cells, so more ROS activate the NFKB pathway.
Papers retrieved from direct search in PubMed. See Figure 2 for details.
| Author (Year) | Study Type | Disease | Route of O3 Application | Unit of Analysis | Sample Size | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sweet F. et al. (1980) | Basic research | Control: | Topical gas | Cell cultures | 5 groups | Control cells suffered no changes while all cancer cells had apoptosis and growth inhibition. At higher doses, control cells had growth inhibition, and cancer cells showed greater damage. |
| Simonetti V. et al. (2017) | Basic research | HT29 human cancer colon | Topical gas +/− | Cell cultures | 14 groups: | O3 damaged cancer cells and has a synergistic effect with both CT drugs. |
| Mokhtari H. et al. (2018) | Basic research | Control: | Cold | Cell cultures | 8 groups: | All cancer cell lines were affected by the exposure to PAM, directly related to the exposure time. O3 production by PAM was the reason. |
| Costanzo M. et al. (2020) | Basic research | HeLa cell line | Topical gas | Cell cultures | 2 groups (O3 different doses) | Cancer cells were not affected at these doses. |
| Li J. et al. (2021) | Basic research | Hepatocarcinoma (bel7402 and SMMC7721 cancer cell lines) | Topical gas | Cell cultures | 2 groups | Ozone restrains the proliferation and migration potential of liver cancer cells via ROS accumulation and PI3K/AKT/NF-κB suppression. |
| Dogan R. et al. (2018) | Basic research | Tongue cancer rat model (4NQO) | Rectal insufflation | Rats | 36: | O3 increases 3 times the survival time compared with RT. RT plus O3 prolonged survival time 11 times more than RT alone. |
Figure 2PRISMA scheme of our review.
Papers retrieved from references’ scan of articles in Table 1 plus articles [4,11].
| Author (Year) | Study Type | Disease | Route of O3 Application | Unit of Analysis | Sample Size | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fetner R. (1958) | Basic research | No disease | Topical gas +/− X-ray | Vicia faba seeds | 4 groups: | Compared with O2, both O3 and X-ray induced chromosome breakages; more together or with higher doses |
| Fetner R. (1962) | Basic research | KB cell line (HeLa) | Topical gas +/− X-ray | Cell culture | 6 groups: | Compared with O2, both O3 and X-ray induced chromosome breakages; more together or with higher doses |
| Grundner HG. et al. (1976)-III | Basic research | Peritoneal carcinomatosis | Topical gas +/− RT | Cell culture | 3 groups: | O3 inhibits tumor growth and is more effective if associated with RT. |
| Karlic H. et al. (1987) | Basic research | Control: | Topical gas +/− RT (Ra226, Ir192, or Co60) | Cell cultures | 29 groups: | Control cells were not damaged by O3, Ra226, or both. Ir192 or Co60 alone damaged control cells. |
| Zanker KS. et al. (1990) | Basic research | - Breast cancer | Topical gas +/− 5-FU | Cell cultures | 12 groups: | Only glioma cells were not damaged by O3, 5-FU or both. In the other cancer cell cultures, O3 and 5-FU had a synergistic or additive effect. |
| Washuttl J. et al. (1990) | Basic research | Control: | Topic gas, | Cell cultures | 6 groups: | O3 does not harm OHT while at the same doses, it induces damage in OC, similar to the produced by the CT. |
| Cannizzaro A. et al. (2007) | Basic research | SK-N-SH and SK-N-DK neuroblastoma | Topical gas +/− CT (Cisplatin, Etoposide, or Gemcitabine) | Cell cultures | 8 groups: | SK-N-SH cells were affected by O3, CT and both (synergistic effect). SK-N-DK cells were only affected by O3. |
| Menendez S. et al. (2008) | Basic research | Erlich ascites carcinoma + Sarcoma 37 | Rectal insufflation | Mice | 50: | Significant decrease in the number of metastases in the O3 group, which was directly related to the O3 dose. |
| Schulz S. et al. (2008) | Basic research | Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | Intraperitoneal insufflation | Rabbits | 59 | Tumor regression that could be blocked by immunosuppressors. |
| Rossmann A. et al. (2014) | Basic research | Head and neck papillomavirus- | Intraperitoneal insufflation | Rabbits | 20 | Tumor eradication due to enhanced immunity (increase in CD3+ T-cells). |
| Hernuss P. et al. (1974) | Basic research | Walker carcinosarcoma | RT +/− Intraperitoneal insufflation | Rats | Not reported. | RT combined with O3 produced better outcomes than only RT. Tumor remission was 39% in the RT + O3 group versus 0% in RT without O3 group. |
| Grundner HG. et al. (1976)-I | Basic research | Peritoneal carcinomatosis | RT +/− intravenous | Mice | Not reported. | O3 does not add any inhibitory effect to RT. |
| Grundner HG. et al. (1976)-II | Basic research | Peritoneal carcinomatosis | RT +/− Intraperitoneal insufflation | Mice | Not reported. | O3 does not add any inhibitory effect to RT. |
| Kiziltan HS. et al. (2015) | Basic research | Peritoneal carcinomatosis | Intraperitoneal insufflation +/− RT | Mice | 60 | O3 and RT increased the survival rates either separately or concurrently. |
| Kuroda K. et al. (2015) | Basic research | Rectal adenocarcinoma | Intratumoral injection of ozonated water | Mice | Not reported. | No changes in normal tissues of healthy mice with O3 water. Normal growth of cancer cells in control animals. |
| Megele R. et al. (2018) | Case series | Glioblastoma: | Surgical re-resection + CT + intrathecal O3 | Patients | 5. | Increased survival rates compared to historical series not treated with O3. The patient treated immediately after the first surgery is alive and without recurrence. |
| Clavo B. et al. (2004) | Case-control series | Advanced head and neck tumors | RT + 5-FU | Patients | 19. | Same survival rates in both groups. |
| Borreli E. et al. (2012) | RCT single-blind | Lung cancer | CT | Patients | 40. | O3 and VA therapy was safe and seems to improve the quality of |