Artemisinin-Is It a Useful Drug for Cancer Treatment in Dogs?

A couple of readers have asked about a purported cancer therapy agent called artemisinin. This is a compound derived from a plant and used for a variety of purposes in the system known as Traditional Chinese Medicine. It is sometimes recommended outside of this system as an herbal therapy for cancer, with the usual claims of dramatic benefits and virtually no risk of side effects. As we’ll see, the truth is more complex and more interesting than such simplistic claims.

What Is It?
A number of compounds have been identified in the plan known most commonly as Sweet Wormwood. Artemisinin is the most widely studied of these and the one most often claimed to have medicinal benefits. The usual forms in which the drug is given is as a dried herb or infusion (steeping the plant in water like tea).

It has been claimed to have benefits in treating cancer and fungal or parasitic infections in pets. It is also widely used, in conjunction with other drugs, in treatment of malaria in humans.

Does It Work?
There is no question that artemisinin has been useful in the treatment of malaria. Like any effective medicine, of course, it has been shown to have side effects (relatively low rates of nausea and vomiting, rare allergic reactions and possibly liver damage), and there is now evidence that malaria is developing resistance to artemisinin-based therapy.

The evidence for use in cancer therapy is not nearly as convincing (see also this review). There are a number of in vitro and lab animal studies showing potentially useful effects on cancer cells. However, this has been true for most cancer therapies that have gone on to be failures in actual clinical trials, so all it establishes is the possibility the drug might be useful, not that it actually is.

The next level of evidence is the case report, which is simply a formalized, published version of the anecdote. There are some case reports showing improvement in human cancer patients with use of artemisinin and related compounds (e.g. 1, 2). However, as with all anecdotes, these reports are subject to enormous risk of bias and confounding, and it is not appropriate to draw conclusions about the safety and efficacy of artemisinin from them. At most, they suggest the possibility that further, controlled testing is appropriate.

There isn’t much in the way of such evidence in humans. One clinical trial combining the compound with chemotherapy for lung cancer patients found no difference in terms of short, medium, or long-term survival. Some difference was seen in the rate of disease progression, but the reality and clinical relevance of this is doubtful, and the source is pretty questionable since it is a Chinese alternative medicine journal, and such journals appear to never publish negative results.

There is, similarly, virtually no clinical trial literature in veterinary species evaluating artemisinin as a cancer therapy. A clinical trial investigating the related compound artesunate as a therapy for lymphoma in dogs has recently been published:

J.N. Bryan, D. Tate, S.M. Bechtel, K. Choy, L. Donnelly, K. Fitzpatrick, B.K. Flesner, B. Fowler, B. Gallis, C.J. Henry, C. Herrera, M. Jabbes, K.A. Selting, T. Sasaki. Randomized, blinded, placebo-controlled trial of artesunate with doxorubicin for B-cell lymphoma of dogs. J Vet Int Med. 2014;28(4):1362.

Artemisinin has described anti-cancer properties. Artemisinin can down-regulate VEGF, HIF-1alpha, and survivin in cancer cells, causing apoptotic death. Artesunate, a water-soluble derivative, has better oral absorption in dogs than artemisinin. The hypothesis was that oral artesunate is tolerable with doxorubicin and results in longer disease-free interval (DFI) than doxorubicin and placebo in dogs with stage 3a or 4a B-cell lymphoma.

Twenty-one qualifying dogs were randomized (blinded) to receive artesunate 20 mg/kg or equivalent placebo. Dogs received study drug alone for 72 hours, then received 30 mg/kg doxorubicin q.3 weeks for three doses with study drug. Thereafter, lymph node measurement, CBC, chemistry profile, and urinalysis were monitored monthly until disease progression. Differences and DFI were compared by Mann-Whitney and Kaplan-Meier logrank tests. Significance was set at P ? 0.05.

Artesunate alone did not cause clinical remission (P = 0.1347). Artesunate induced no biochemical toxicosis. One dog experienced progressive disease following doxorubicin; all others experienced a complete response. Artesunate caused no greater neutropenia or thrombocytopenia following doxorubicin (P = 0.6234 and P = 0.2311). DFI was not different between groups (70d for placebo and 122d for artesunate, P = 0.967). Dogs receiving artesunate had higher nucleated red blood cell counts (median 272nRBC/100WBC artesunate and 9nRBC/ 100WBC placebo, P = 0.0142). Red cells displayed poikilocytosis and basophilic stippling in artesunate-treated dogs.

Artesunate did not cause remission as a single agent, nor improved DFI in dogs treated with doxorubicin. 20 mg/kg artesunate caused evidence of heme stress in treated dogs. Artesunate was otherwise well tolerated with doxorubicin. Artesunate cannotbe recommended as a therapy for B-cell lymphoma in dogs.

This trial, like that reported in humans, found no evidence that artesunate improved survival used in conjunction with chemotherapy, and it did not appear to have any beneficial effects used alone.

Another uncontrolled clinical trial in dogs was identified some possible toxicity as well as some possible benefits, but was the heterogeneity of patients and treatments make any firm conclusions impossible.

So far, the clinical trial evidence does not strongly support the preliminary in vitro and lab animal studies or case reports that suggested these compounds might have benefits in cancer patients. This is not unusual, since the vast majority of drugs fail to become useful treatments in actual patients even when they initially look promising in pre-clinical studies. More research may help clarify the value, if any, of artemisinin in cancer therapy.

Is It Safe?
A number of potential risks to artemisinin have been reported in humans and other species. Generally, side effects have been mild and rare in humans, with low rates of vomiting and other GI symptoms reported. There have been concerns about neurologic toxicity, including hearing damage, but it is not yet clear how significant this risk really is. In the context of malaria treatment, where there are clear benefits, the risks appear to be small enough in most cases (other than pregnant women and, possibly, young children) to justify use. However, the risks in cancer patients have not been established.

In dogs, there have not been safety studies in cancer patients either, however there is stronger evidence of risk with artemisinin use. One study of various forms and routes of administration found anemia, neurotoxicity, and changes in mitochondria. Other studies have also found significant toxicity at high doses (see also this study). However, other studies using different forms and dosages have not reported adverse effects.

Bottom Line
There is clear clinical trial evidence that artemisinin is useful in the management of malaria in humans, though there are some concerns about it losing its efficacy. Side effects are reported, but they are usually mild and uncommon.

There is some pre-clinical evidence (in vitro studies and lab animal studies) suggesting artemisinin and related compounds might have some benefit in cancer treatment. This is supported by a few uncontrolled case reports in humans. However, the limited clinical trial evidence does not generally support any real benefit for actual patients, human or canine. More research is needed to clarify whether there are circumstances in which the drug might be helpful, but it is by no means a reliable, proven cancer therapy.

Pre-clinical trials in dogs have found some potentially significant risks, which seem to be greater than those seen in humans. Some of these, such as changes in red blood cell production, have also been seen in the limited clinical trials done in dogs, but others have not.

Overall, there is enough evidence to support further controlled clinical research but not to use the treatment in patients outside the context of appropriate clinical trials designed to assess safety and efficacy.

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72 Responses to Artemisinin-Is It a Useful Drug for Cancer Treatment in Dogs?

  1. skeptvet says:

    You make some valid points, but you are also mistaken on several points:
    1. scientific studies can be worthless- This is absolutely true. No single study proves or disproves everything, and conclusions must always be proportional to the strength of the evidence. Consistent findings from good quality studies over time are highly reliable. Findings from single studies that contradict well-established knowledge are highly likely to be wrong.
    We also have well-established criteria for judging the risk o bias and error in research studies. We can often identify those in which we should have low levels of confidence. However, the fact that some studies are poorly done or mistaken doesn’t change the fact that controlled research is still more reliable than uncontrolled personal observation and experience.

    2. Lots of anecdotes cannot be dismissed by a scientific study- Yes, in fact, they can. Thousands of years of anecdote-based belief in the value of bloodletting as a medical therapy were quite definitively shown to be wrong by only a small amount of research evidence. Anecdotes are THAT unreliable.

    3. It is arrogant for scientists to dismiss anecdotes- Nope. It is simply an acknowledgement of their low worth. Anecdotes should, as you say, be used only to generate testable hypotheses. They do nothing at all to prove or disprove those hypotheses, and it is not arrogant to say so. What is more, relying on the evidence rather than personal experience is a manifestation of humility and an awareness of our personal limitations. What is arrogant is to believe one’s personal experience can or should trump real data.

    I find the term “arrogant” is often code for “a judgement I don’t like,” and that seems to fit your usage here.

    4. You have nothing to lose- Complete bollocks. Unproven and insufficiently tested remedies harm and kill patients, and grasping at straws without real evidence is dangerous.

  2. Lauras says:

    You clearly have not read the Univ of Wa Study on this topic. Please read and try again.

  3. skeptvet says:

    Sorry, you have to work harder than that. If there is relevant evidence I haven’t seen, I am happy t look at it and even change my mind, but you’ll need to share the study and explain why you think it leads to a different conclusion than the evidence I have discussed.

  4. David says:

    A lot of patients die everyday with “proven” methods. If there is indeed a better way to address these diseases , why has it not been discovered and establish she’d as protocol. People generally turn the less traditional methods because they have lost faith in the traditional ones.

  5. skeptvet says:

    Sure, but the fact that people grasp at alternative therapies out of desperation when there is no proven effective treatment doesn’t mean those therapies work. And it is wrong to abuse this desperation by selling quackery.

  6. David says:

    I do appreciate your thoughts, but honestly when someone is desperate they turn to traditional and non-traditional methods, only the outcome determines whether it is quackery, regardless of the method. There are a huge numbers of malpractice everyday by qualified traditionalist. I don’t believe people want to stray from mainstream, but they have been let down and and disenchanted by some of the outcomes. Was it the quackery that lead people astray or the greed with the same end results? The Flexner Report was the catalyst for the mess that has become our insurance(corporate greed) managed medical system in this country. IMHO That was the beginning of people becoming disenchanted.
    So, if I’m dying and modern medicine can’t resolve and they offer me a 10% chance for $100K and someone tells me for $10 I can eat cat turds and have a chance to live, the end state is still the same . All we need to determine is who is the quack.
    The system is broken.

  7. skeptvet says:

    You are confusing two issues–the inadequacies in the healthcare system and the way we decide which therapies work and which don’t. The healthcare system is a mess, no question. However, scientific research is still the most reliable way to tell which therapies work, and those based on history, tradition, anecdote, or just pure faith are very unlikely to help. The flaws in mainstream healthcare don’t have anything to do with this and don’t make it any better for people to seek out quack therapies, even if it understandable why they do.

    And when you say “only the outcome determines whether it is quackery,” you express a common but dangerous misconception about what evidence and “proof” is. Bloodletting was always quackery and did only harm to patients, never good. The fact that plenty of patients treated by bloodletting got better anyway, and that this led people to believe it was effective, didn’t make it any less of a quack therapy. The same is true for homeopathy and many others that have been proven useless, and it is likely true for many alternative therapies that haven’t yet been fully tested. Our personal observations just aren’t worth much in terms of assessing the value of medical treatment because reality is much more complicated than our simplistic way of thinking that “I did X and got better so X must have worked.”

    The other side of this is that desperate people shouldn’t be lied to or given false hope. And it is a mistake to believe that grasping at straws, even when you have a terrible disease, can’t make you any worse. Even people dying of pancreatic cancer, which science-based medicine can’t treat very effectively, live shorter and more uncomfortable lives when given the Gonzalez Protocol ( a classic quack therapy). Instead of accepting the inevitable and being kept comfortable, these people died chasing false hope and being put through unnecessary discomfort. Ignoring science makes people’s lives worse even though science, and the system we use to turn it into medical care, is far from perfect.

  8. Deb says:

    The study referred to by the reader above was done by a dr researcher at the university of Washington. I believe his name is Dr. Lai. He used artemisinin on a canine with osteosarcoma and had good results, with the dog still alive 2 yrs later. That is amazing considering the severity of this bone cancer and the speed at which it progresses. My dog was just diagnosed with this same disease and I am giving her 200mg twice a day.

  9. skeptvet says:

    See, this is why the details matter. There are no published clinical studies of artemesinin in dogs with osteosarcoma, which is what would be needed to show it is a safe and effective treatment. There is a study showing artemesinin affects canine osteosarcoma cells in a test tube, but that is a far cry from a real-world use. Bleach kills cancer cells in a test tube too, but it is hardly a safe cancer treatment.

    Dr. Lai has been quoted in some alternative medicine magazine articles saying that he knows of a dog with OSA treated with artemesinin that got better, but this is an anecdote, not a study. Haphazard “try-it-and-see” anecdotes are not scientific studies, and they don’t prove anything. Real research may soemday show this is a useful drug for this disease, but so far the evidence isn’t there.

  10. Crystal S Hare says:

    My 4 year old Pyr was dx with osteosarcoma in her left front leg. We amputated including shoulder blade and lymph node, with no chemo or radiation. It is post 1 month and I was considering using the artemisinin plus bioperine just as a possible preventative for the likelihood this disease is going to continue to spread. We want to get the most quality time we can. Any thoughts, or am I just searching for the “magic” bullet?

  11. skeptvet says:

    Unfortunately, the truth is no one knows because this kind of use hasn’t been properly tested, so it’s a bit of a roll of the dice. My fear with reaching for untested remedies is that there is always the possibility we can make our pets feel worse for the time they have left, but for some the risk and uncertainty are worth tolerating, so it has to be your call.

    Good luck!

  12. Michelle Daws says:

    Treatment of Iron-Loaded Veterinary Sarcoma by Artemisia annua
    Breuer E, Efferth T. Treatment of Iron-Loaded Veterinary Sarcoma by Artemisia annua. Nat Prod Bioprospect. 2014;4(2):113-8.
    MLA Breuer, Elmar and Thomas Efferth. “Treatment of Iron-Loaded Veterinary Sarcoma by Artemisia annua” Natural products and bioprospecting vol. 4,2 (2014): 113-8.
    APA Breuer, E., & Efferth, T. (2014). Treatment of Iron-Loaded Veterinary Sarcoma by Artemisia annua. Natural products and bioprospecting, 4(2), 113-8.
    Download as: RISNBIBJSON
    Elmar Breuer and Thomas

    Artemisia annuaL. preparations (Luparte®) were obtained from Lupovet GmbH (Müllheim/Baden, Germany)

  13. skeptvet says:

    Case reports with no control group, blinding, randomization, statistical comparison, or any other control for bias and error. These are useful in generating a hypothesis to be tested, but this kind of study can never prove efficacy for any treatment.

  14. Sally Hardy says:

    My dog, a big Rottie was diagnosed with osteosarcoma 2 years ago. He takes 300 mgs of Artemisinin a day for 5 days a week. He also takes immune mushroom pills, Black seed oil, salmon oil, and turmeric pills every day twice a day. Also takes liquid Hemp Rx oil. With a diet of high immune boosting foods. His site was on lower right foot and didn’t change much or become painful until this past August. Had the leg amputated and at that time saw no signs of metastasis. His oncologist is wonderful and I feel so Blessed to have had him for this length of time. I have to believe that these drugs have had a large impact on his recovery and longevity. So many people have been skeptic but he he was only 5 yrs when diagnosed and I knew I had to fight for him. I’m a believer in this. Good luck to all who are going through this.

  15. Dave Munn says:

    My 13 yr old collie has a malignant Melanoma on his front lower leg. I was guided to try Artemisinin as an application on the tumour to see if the cells reduced. Success has been noted previously by reputable Holistic vets on dogs.
    Has anyone specific views on this, please?

  16. skeptvet says:

    Well, to begin with “reputable” and “holistic” don’t really go together since, unfortunately, “holistic” is usually a code word fro using unproven or ineffective therapies.

    As far as the artemisinin, the evidence is reviewed in this article, and there isn’t any reliable reason to believe it will help. Anecdotes are not reliable evidence, so the best thing you can do for your dog is consult a board-certified veterinary oncologist for science-based options.

    Here is more on the problems with anecdotes_

    Lots of reasons why anecdotes like this aren’t reliable and don’t actually tell us if therapies work or not:

    Why Anecdotes Can’t be Trusted

    Anmecdote

  17. Brian Wermeyer says:

    Hello @Mary. I just ran across these posts and am wondering how things worked out with the artemisinin.

  18. skeptvet says:

    Still not much clarity. A large number of in vitro and animal model studies and a few pilot trials have been done since 2014 which continue to sho promising results. However, there are still no convincing clinical trials showing significant benefits in real patients, human or companion animal. One retrospective study in pets suggested some survival benefit, but such studies are much more prone to error than prospective designs, so this is pretty limited evidence. Evidence in humans and in dogs has also shown some small problems with bioavailability and toxicity, so the risk/benefit balance of clinical use isn’t yet clear.

  19. Brian Wermeyer says:

    Thanks for your reply. I was hoping to get a response from Mary. I have been searching for more information on it’s usage. I know there are no clinical trials. Most of the stuff I’ve found it just speculation, so I discount that.

    I’ve found a couple of human doctors that are using it to treat their patients.

    https://drceaser.com/therapies/iv-therapies/iv-artemisinin/

    Dr. Ceaser has not replied to my email in spite of the fact that I have supplied him with a ton of data on my dog.

    I’ve found this human doctor as well.

    https://integrativehealthcarespringfieldmo.com/artemisinin-iv-therapy-alternative-cancer-treatment-springfield-missouri/

    I’ve yet to contact her.

    I do not have good knowledge of biochemistry, actually none at all. I am thinking HBOT followed by IV Artemisinin. From what I’ve read the real challenge is getting a response from the hypoxic tumor cells. These guys don’t respond well to radiation therapy because of the low oxygen. I’m thinking an HBOT treatment might add enough oxygen to them for there to be a reaction to the Artemisinin. We did HBOT for my dog when he underwent stereotactic RT.

    I’ve reached out to Henry Lai and sent all of the data on my dog. His current research interest is in low frequency EMF and Artemisinin. We’ve been using PEMF on my dog and it has been most effective. We just can’t stop new tumors from popping up.

    I am realistic. I just want to keep the quality of my dog’s life as high as possible.

  20. skeptvet says:

    All reasonable hypotheses, none proven to actually be true. It’s fair to look for plausible but unproven treatments when there is nothing clearly demonstrated to work, but I always have to caution people that lack of conclusive evidence for efficacy also means lack of conclusive evidence for safety. Anything that has real physiologic effects, such as high tissue concentrations of oxygen, for example, can do harm as well as provide benefits, so it’s always a roll of the dice. Again, sometimes rolling the dice makes sense, but sometimes we do it out of fear or desperation and end up making things worse, so it’s a decision to be taken carefully. Good luck!

  21. Brian Wermeyer says:

    First off, I am not desperate. My dog is extremely stable and lives a very high quality of life. Nothing that has been “done to him” is dangerous. My dog has already had 5 HBOT treatments, three of them just before SRT.

    No harm has ever been done to my dog and no harm will ever be done to him. He is not a lab rat and will never be treated as such. I don’t work off of hypotheses and won’t do something to my dog based on a hypothesis, conjecture or speculation.

    I am looking for information on in vivo treatments that have been shown to have some positive affect on tumors. Statistics speak louder to me than hypothetical BS. I am probably just about as much of a skeptic about things as you are. 🙂

  22. skeptvet says:

    My point, which you don’t seem to appreciate, is that without robust clinical research evidence, you don’t know that HBOT or PEMF doesn’t or can’t cause harm; you just assume it. People took Vitamin E for years assuming it was safe and might be beneficial as an antioxidant, and then research showed it increased the risk of certain cancers. Harm is not always grossly evident immediately, and some risks are only understood with data on many patients. Oxygen toxicity and various other potential adverse effects of HBOT do exist, and following the course of only one case it is impossible to know if the treatment improved or worsened the eventual outcome. The same is true for any treatment with scant clinical research evidence to support it. You may be skeptically minded, but you are actively pursuing treatments with little to no clinical research evidence in the target population (e.g. dogs with cancer), and you refuse to recognizer that there may be potential risks involved. Whether or not it is the appropriate thing to do is up to you, but not even recognizing the potential for harm suggests your view of these therapies is not very balanced or evidence-based.

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