Fractionated dose chemotherapy plus insulin potentiation therapy (IPT)

Fractionated dose chemotherapy plus insulin potentiation therapy (IPT)

Insulin Potentiation Therapy (IPT) is an alternative way to administer chemotherapy in fractionated low dose to cancer patients with similar results to full dose chemo but with minimum or no side effects.

  • Cancer cells have highly active insulin receptors.
  • Cancer cells require big amounts of glucose to reproduce and live.

With IPT the insulin works on the tumor cell membranes due to nature of cancer cells, that are having lot of insulin receptors on the surface. Beside to reduce glucose level in the body, inducing patients into a hypoglycemia temporal and controlled status.

Inducing hypoglycemia is how cancer cells are changing their anatomical structure, making membranes permeable, allowing chemotherapy to penetrate faster, but also it affects the cancer cell mitosis (multiplying) cycle.

Chemotherapy doses can be fractionated in about 20% from the regular complete dose on a weekly basis, (every 8 days), avoiding the most common side effects, like immune system damage, nausea, vomiting and hair loose.

In our experience of 25 years, we can compare results between regular chemotherapy dose delivery every 21 days and low dose chemo every 8 days with same or faster clinical response but with a big difference in terms of negative and typical side effects.

In summary IPT (Insulin potentiation therapy) and controlled hypoglycemia makes chemotherapy a TARGETED therapy against cancer cells 90% and only 10% against normal cells.

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