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Bladder cancers respond to intravesical instillation of (HAMLET human α-lactalbumin made lethal to tumor cells)

✍ Scribed by Ann-Kristin Mossberg; Björn Wullt; Lotta Gustafsson; Wiking Månsson; Eva Ljunggren; Catharina Svanborg


Book ID
102862557
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
French
Weight
558 KB
Volume
121
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

We studied if bladder cancers respond to HAMLET (human α‐lactalbumin made lethal to tumor cells) to establish if intravesical HAMLET application might be used to selectively remove cancer cells in vivo. Patients with nonmuscle invasive transitional cell carcinomas were included. Nine patients received 5 daily intravesical instillations of HAMLET (25 mg/ml) during the week before scheduled surgery. HAMLET stimulated a rapid increase in the shedding of tumor cells into the urine, daily, during the 5 days of instillation. The effect was specific for HAMLET, as intravesical instillation of NaCl, PBS or native α‐lactalbumin did not increase cell shedding. Most of the shed cells were dead and an apoptotic response was detected in 6 of 9 patients, using the TUNEL assay. At surgery, morphological changes in the exophytic tumors were documented by endoscopic photography and a reduction in tumor size or change in tumor character was detected in 8 of 9 patients. TUNEL staining was positive in biopsies from the remaining tumor in 4 patients but adjacent healthy tissue showed no evidence of apoptosis and no toxic response. The results suggest that HAMLET exerts a direct and selective effect on bladder cancer tissue in vivo and that local HAMLET administration might be of value in the future treatment of bladder cancers. © 2007 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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HAMLET (human α-lactalbumin made lethal
✍ Sonja Aits; Lotta Gustafsson; Oskar Hallgren; Patrick Brest; Mattias Gustafsson; 📂 Article 📅 2009 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 French ⚖ 751 KB

## Abstract HAMLET, a complex of partially unfolded α‐lactalbumin and oleic acid, kills a wide range of tumor cells. Here we propose that HAMLET causes macroautophagy in tumor cells and that this contributes to their death. Cell death was accompanied by mitochondrial damage and a reduction in the l