Medical Center Cologne
Sachsenring 83
50677 Cologne | Germany
Tel.: +49 221 788030
Fax: +49 221 78803250

TIPS

The possible role of the dendritic cells in the biological immune response against malignancies (solid tumors) was discovered and clinically investigated...

The goal of hyperthermia in oncology is to induce a fever state that will activate the immune system, and destroy the cancer cells. ...

Fever-range, total-body hyperthermia



Fever-range, total-body hyperthermia has the role to restart the immune system.

Practically all cancer patient have a lower than average core temperature and are unable to develop a fever—thus they are unable to activate their immune system. To reactivate immune function, a controlled fever is induced to artificially heat the body—this process is known as therapeutic fever.

Fever-range, total-body hyperthermia is non-toxic treatment that is often linked to improved temperature regulation in the body.

The treatment is well-tolerated by practically all patients, and can be provided in combination with a range of other therapies. In the past 25 years, more than 1,000 clinical trials and thousands of scientific articles have been published on induced total-body hyperthermia and localized hyperthermia in the peer-reviewed medical literature. Hyperthermia has also been studied for chronic pain, asthma, and other chronic or recurrent respiratory infections, urinary tract infections, and immune deficiency. More than 700 research studies have focused specifically on cancer treatment using total body hyperthermia.

Research on fever therapy for cancer has been performed in medical schools and research centers since the 1980s.

These studies have been conducted primarily in the U.S., Germany, and Japan, but also in Australia, China, Denmark, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, South Korea, and other countries.



Hyperthermia can be used as the primary form of treatment or safely applied in combination with conventional therapies such as chemotherapy or radiation.
American research has been conducted in FDA-approved studies at centers such as the Mayo Clinic, University of Pennsylvania, University of Texas, and Duke University. These studies reflect a global dialogue between researchers across the world that has systematically defined effective fever therapy. Controlled studies have documented that chemotherapy or radiation in combination with total body hyperthermia becomes more effective, often with fewer side effects than chemotherapy or radiation alone. In the European Union, this combination therapy is widely available at numerous major cancer treatment centers in cities such as Amsterdam, Hamburg, Munich, Rotterdam, Stuttgart, and Utrecht.



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