FOR CLINICIANS - GET BETTER CLINICAL OUTCOMES

The Center for Deuterium Depletion’s mission is to empower cancer patients and their families, friends, and physicians with better clinical outcomes. Here's to a world free from the tyranny of cancer.

We all know that the clinical outcomes we are getting as cancer researchers and clinicians are not where we want them to be. Day after day, we see beautiful lives wasted at the hands of this disease and, even if our patients don't always know it, it makes us sad, mad, and frustrated. That's why our sole goal is to provide you with healthier, metabolically stronger patients so that you can use your experience and training to treat their disease with the knowledge that your success rate will go up!

Our referral process is very easy. Just click on the floating Refer a Patient button, provide a bit of information, and tell us if the referral is for a wellness program, a metabolic optimization program, an active cancer program, a cancer remission program, a pre-chemo or pre-radiation program, or a metabolic disorder program to support a patient with Lyme disease, chronic fatigue, diabetes, cognitive decline, etc. We will call the patient to arrange a consult and get her of him started. The CDD will then update you monthly on your patient's deuterium depletion therapy progress and remind you to keep a close eye on her or his clinical status. Remember, our goal is to give you a patient with a stronger metabolism. You must, therefore, be ready for signs of your patient getting better and adjust both your protocol and clinical expectations accordingly.

How deuterium depletion impacts cancer cells:

  • Increases permeability of cells to chemotherapy.
  • Triggers apoptosis.
  • Prevents the production of cancer cell building blocks.
  • Restructures important cellular proteins.
  • Creates heat shock protein to trigger apoptosis.
  • Slows rate of proliferation.
  • Decreases metabolic fuel.
  • Impaires RNA/DNA creation.
  • Inhibits DNA repair.
  • Alters DNA packaging.
  • Disrupts cellular metabolism.

The following have been seen with complementary deuterium depletion therapy:

  • A decrease in the severity of side-effects associated with standard of care cancer therapy.
  • A decrease in recovery times following standard of care therapy.
  • Increased patient physical, mental, and emotional resilancy.
  • Increased effectiveness of standard of care therapies even when they have failed before using complementary deuterium depletion therapy.
  • Longer time in remission.
  • Improved mean survival times.

Our protocols have been used to treat more than 10,000 cancer patients and many hundreds of wellness warriors and patients with other metabolic disorders like chronic fatigue. Here is an example from a peer-reviewed article* showing how our complementary approach helps lower PSA values in prostate cancer.

In addition to lowering PSA values, the actual prostate size was also greatly decreased. Deuterium depletion has similar positive benefits for a number of other cancers too. Clinicians can request a clinical summary package covering additional types of cancer by clicking on the Refer a Patient button.

We don't treat or mitigate disease, our goal is to improve mitochondrial function and make patients stronger, standard of care more effective, and clinical outcomes better. Here is a schematic of how deuterium depletion is integrated with standard of care.

SAMPLE ONCOLOGY STUDIES

More than 10,000 cancer patients have used deuterium depletion as a complementary or standalone therapy. This section contains summary studies for lung, prostate, breast, and pancreatic cancers. These are scientific papers and may be a little difficult for some laypeople. The bottom line is that the treatment group patients in each study consumed Preventa deuterium depleted water (DDW) but their standard of care treatment, diet, and lifestyle habits were not controlled. Regardless of that, all four studies demonstrate that DDW consumption results in better than expected clinical outcomes and longer cancer-free living for lung, prostate, breast, and pancreatic cancers no matter the stage of the cancer.

PROSTATE CANCER

In order to investigate the anticancer effect of DDW in humans a four-month long double-blind phase 2 placebo controlled clinical trial was conducted on prostate cancer (OGYI 5621/40/95). The primary outcome was the best response, and the agent's safety was also assessed. Forty-four patients were evaluated, 22 patients were involved in the treated-, and 22 patients in the placebo group, both groups received the same forms of conventional treatment. Summarizing the changes in prostate volume during the 4 months' period of the trial in the treated group a net decrease of 160.3 cm3 was achieved, on the contrary, the result was 54 cm3 in the control group. During the extended follow-up of the 44 patients, in the first year (from the date of entering the trial), 2 patients (9.1%) died in the treated group and 9 patients (40.9%) in the placebo group (significantly lower mortality in the treated group; Fisher's Exact Test, p=0.034).

In addition, beside the 44 evaluated patients in the phase 2 clinical trial, the course of the disease was also retrospectively evaluated in 91 patients consuming DDW parallel with the conventional forms of treatment. 20 out of 91 retrospectively followed patients developed distant metastasis within one year after the diagnosis. The median survival time (MST) was 5.4 year, while the historical control is 1.2-1.6 years.

The results suggest that DDW might reduce the mortality of prostate cancer, since it was able to delay progression as well as to prolong MST in patients with histologically confirmed prostate cancer.

References:

*A. Kovács, I. Guller, K. Krempels, I. Somlyai, I. Jánosi, Z.    Gyöngyi, Szabó, I. Ember and Gábor Somlyai (2011) Deuterium Depletion May Delay the Progression of Prostate Cancer. Journal of Cancer Therapy 2, 548-556.

Somlyai, A. Kovács, I. Guller, Z. Gyöngyi, K. Krempels, I. Somlyai, M. Szabó, Berkényi, M. Molnár (2010) Deuterium has a key role in tumour development – new target in anticancer drug development. European Journal of Cancer 8(5):208.

Somlyai, G. Jancsó, Gy. Jákli, T. Berkényi, Z. Gyöngyi, I. Ember (2001) The Biological Effect of Deuterium Depleted Water, a Possible New Tool in Cancer Therapy. Anticancer Research 21:1617.

BREAST CANCER

The impact of DDW on breast cancer patients was evaluated in a retrospective study. Among the 232 patients, involved between February 1993 and April 2011, 158 had early stage breast tumor at the beginning of DDW consumption, and 74 had progressed stage tumor with distant metastasis. In the early stage breast cancer patients involved, median survival time was 217 months (18.1 years). In the subgroup where the patients started to drink DDW after the conventional therapy, in tumor-free state (in complete remission), extraordinarily good results could be achieved: median survival time was impossible to calculate because of the very low death rate during the follow-up period. In cases where the patient repeated DDW cure at least once, median survival was 293 months (24.4 years) which underlines that repeated lowering of deuterium level may play an important role also in prevention of relapse or metastasizing.

In a separate study, the effect of DDW on the survival in a patient group with distant metastatic breast cancer was analyzed. Data of 74 female patients between January 1993 and May 2005 were evaluated. All but 6 of the 74 patients had previously undergone intensive and repeated conventional therapy and their expected survival time at the beginning of the study was merely a few months. In the 74 evaluated patients 135 distant metastases were diagnosed before DDW treatment. DDW was applied in parallel with conventional cancer therapy in a supplementary manner, and the total daily water intake of the patients was covered by DDW. Simultaneous DDW and conventional treatment resulted in complete or partial reduction, or stagnation, of the tumor volume in 74.3% of the 74 patients evaluated. Median survival time from the diagnosis of the distant metastasis was 47.7 months, in contrast to 20-22 months found in literature sources. Likelihood of two-year survival of patients with distant metastases, consuming DDW simultaneously with conventional therapies, was 77.8%, while that of patients receiving only conventional therapies was 20%.

References:

K. Krempels, I. Somlyai, Z. Gyöngyi, I. Ember, K. Balog, O. Abonyi, G. Somlyai (2013) A retrospective study of survival in breast cancer patients undergoing deuterium depletion in addition to conventional therapies. Journal of Cancer Research & Therapy 2013, 1(8):194–200.

K. Krempels, I. Somlyai, K. Balog, G. Somlyai (2012) A retrospective study of survival in breast cancer patients undergoing deuterium-depletion in addition to the conventional therapies. Abstract in: 2nd International Congress on Deuterium Depletion European Chemical Bulletin, 1(1-2), 46-47.

G. Somlyai (2004) A deutérium depletio hatása IV. stádiumban lévő, emlőtumoros betegek várható túlélésére/Deuterium Depletion and its Impact on Life Expectancy of Patients with Stage IV breast tumor. Komplementer Medicina/Journal of Complementary and Alternative Medicine VIII (4):30-35.

LUNG CANCER

The effect of DDW on lung tumors and the expected survival of lung tumor patients was evaluated in a retrospective study.

From the data of the 129 patients involved, median survival increased for men from the expected 7.5 to 25.9 months, and for women, from 11.3 to 74.1 months as a result of supplementary DDW application; while in the average for both sexes, median survival was 33.7 months. In cases of non-small cell lung cancer with brain metastasis, expected median survival time is usually 19 to 27 months, but in our study it was 31.1 for both sexes.

Application of DDW thus prolonged the expected median survival time of lung cancer patients 2 to 4- fold, compared to the patient population not consuming DDW. In certain cases, several years of survival or even complete remission was observed instead of the clinically expected few months. The cases of four lung cancer patients with brain metastasis who consumed DDW have been presented in our paper published in the Journal of Cancer Therapy.

References:

Z. Gyöngyi, F. Budán, I. Szabó, I. Ember, I. Kiss, K. Krempels, I. Somlyai, G. Somlyai (2012) Deuterium Depleted Water Effects on Survival of Lung Cancer Patients and Expression of Kras and Bcl2 Genes in Mouse Lung. Nutrition and Cancer, 65:2, 240-246.

K. Krempels, I. Somlyai and Gábor Somlyai (2008)  A retrospective evaluation of the effects of deuterium depleted water consumption on four patients with brain metastases from lung cancer. Integrative Cancer Therapies 7(3):172-81.

PANCREATIC CANCER

The effect of DDW on pancreatic tumors was evaluated in in vitro tests and a retrospective clinical study. In the in vitro tests, the effect of DDW was studied alone and in combination with the cytostatic Cisplatin on a Gemzar-resistant MIA PaCa-2 pancreas tumor cell line by means of the xCELLigence RTCA system (Roche Applied Sciences). This method is of advance because the cells are being monitored under physiological conditions, and cell division can be followed in real time without radioactive labelling and manipulating the cells. In the tests, changes of electric resistance are measured by means of a meshwork of microelectrodes on the bottom of the culture dish. The measured impedance increases in parallel with the growth and adhesion of the cells. This is described with the normalized cell index (CI). DDW (with 135, 125, 115, 105, 85, 65 and 40 ppm deuterium) inhibited the growth of MIA PaCa-2 pancreas tumor cells in vitro in a dose-dependent manner, with significant (p<0.02) CI decrease vs. control (150 ppm D). The cytotoxicity of Cisplatin was tested at the concentrations 20, 40 and 60 μM, combined with DDW (50 ppm D), on the MIA PaCa-2 cells. Combined application dose-dependently decreased CI, and synergism was observed. This raised the possibility that the same efficiency could be achieved with lower concentrations of the cytostatic, that is, with lower toxicity. Cisplatin showed maximum efficiency at 40 μM in presence of 50 ppm D, or already at 20 μM if 25 ppm deuterium was in the medium. This is another proof of synergism between Cisplatin and DDW in Gemzar-resistant MIA PaCa-2 cells. The results clearly show that combination of DDW and chemotherapy allows lowering the dose of cytostatics, with preserved efficiency but substantially reduced harmful side effects. In the retrospective clinical study, the survival of pancreas tumor patients was increased 6.5 times – from 6 to 39 months – by supplemental application of deuterium depletion, if DDW treatment was started within 60 days after diagnosis (n=18). In those patients (n=14) who were involved in the study more than 60 days after diagnosis, MST was 16 months.

DDW inhibited the growth of MIA PaCa-2 pancreas tumor cells in vitro. Applied together with conventional therapy, DDW prolonged MST of patients with progressive, inoperable pancreatic cancer 4-6 times.

Reference:

Boros L.G., Meuillet E.J., Somlyai I., Jancsó G., Jákli G., Krempels K., Puskás L.G., Nagy L., Molnár M., Laderoute K.R., Thompson P.A., Somlyai G. (2014) Fumarate hydratase and deuterium depletion control oncogenesis via NADPH-dependent reductive synthesis. AACR 2014 - Annual Meeting, April 5-9, San Diego, CA, USA, DOI: 10.12918/HYD2014AACRPOST.

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Center for Deuterium Depletion
Los Angeles, CA

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