Complete Immunophenotypic Reversal of Chronic Lymphocytic Leukaemia With High Dose Parenteral Methylcobalamin: A Case Report and Brief Review of Cobalamin in Cancer
Carmen Wheatley

TL;DR
A case report shows that high-dose methylcobalamin may lead to a complete reversal of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia.
Contribution
This is the eighth documented case of immunophenotypic reversal of CLL, potentially linked to methylcobalamin treatment.
Findings
The patient experienced complete disappearance of lymphocytosis after switching to high-dose methylcobalamin.
Immunophenotyping showed no clonal disease present in the 4th and 5th years following treatment.
Cobalamin forms like methylcobalamin are hypothesized to have cancer-protective and cytotoxic effects.
Abstract
Supposed ‘spontaneous’ remissions in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) are extremely rare. By the most stringent immunophenotypic criteria, there are only seven cases to date of unexplained, immune system effected cures. A historic review of this phenomenon is presented as context for this eighth case of CLL immunophenotypic reversal. A 59‐year‐old, molecular biologist, stage I CLL, whose diagnosis and recovery were both thoroughly documented, not content to watch and wait, chose to treat himself, after individual tumour susceptibility testing, with evidence based, biological response modifiers, which initially seemed to keep his CLL stable. This included 1 mg of hydroxocobalamin injected i.m. daily. However, after some years his lymphocytosis began slowly to drift upwards. At that point, he was persuaded to change his injection protocol to methylcobalamin, at 50 mg i.m. a day, a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Research · Folate and B Vitamins Research · Retinoids in leukemia and cellular processes
