Complete Spontaneous Regression Of Cancer: Four Case Reports, Review Of Literature, And Discussion Of Possible Mechanisms Involved.
Chang W. Y. (2000). Complete spontaneous regression of cancer: four case reports, review of literature, and discussion of possible mechanisms involved. Hawaii medical journal, 59(10), 379–387.
View Original Source →Abstract
Spontaneous regression or remission (SR) of cancers has been defined as the disappearance of the malignancies without any treatment or with obviously inadequate treatment. Four case reports are presented. These include a case of pleomorphic liposarcoma with bilateral lung metastases, a case of recurrent squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus following esophagectomy a year earlier, a case of a squamous cell carcinoma of the scalp, and a case of a ruptured hepatocellular carcinoma with an emergency right hepatic lobectomy but with some gross cancer remaining in the left hepatic lobe. The literature of SR of cancers was reviewed and various mechanisms possibly involved in the disappearance of the cancers were discussed. Although immune modulation has been stated to be the most likely process causing SR, other mechanisms, such as genetic therapy, withdrawal of carcinogens, infection, fever and vaccine roles, apoptosis, antibody, antiangiogenesis and maturation mechanisms, withdrawal of therapy, natural killer activity, endocrine, hormonal, and pregnancy factors, and prayers or psychoneuro-religious participation were also mentioned. Induction and inhibition of malignant protein expression and repair of gene damage may prove to be the more important processes in cancer regression. It was also pointed out that the pulmonary metastases of the liposarcoma and the recurrent squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus may be the very first cases of their kind to be described and that it is rare indeed to find 4 cases of SR's in a solo practice. Finally, it is likely that SR is rarer than previously believed and that the incidence may be one in every 140,000 cases of cancer rather the one per 60,000 to 100,000 cancer cases as earlier thought.
Case Details
Disease Location
B) right hepatic lope
Personal Characteristics
B) 53-year old chinese man from tahiti presented with large mass in upper right abdomen; history of billroth ii gastrectomy for large benign gastric ulcer and cirrhosis of the liver in august of 1966
Clinical Characteristics
Just before scheduled laparotomy, patient became hypotensive and rushed into surgery, which revealed large hepatocellular carcinoma in right lobe of cirrhotic liver and rapid right hepatic lobectomy performed (due to hypotension and emergency nature of surgery) and gross cancer was left in left lobe of liver
Remission Characteristics
B) 17 years after surgery, patient was examined and shown free of cancer
Treatment & Mechanisms
Proposed Remission Mechanisms
B) none reported
Clinical Treatment
B) emergency hepatic lobectomy; 5-fluorouracil weekly for a months after surgery
Non-Clinical Treatment
B) none reported discussed