The Prime Cause and Prevention
of Cancer
Dr. Otto Warburg
Lecture delivered to Nobel Laureates on June 30, 1966
at Lindau, Lake Constance, Germany
There are prime and secondary causes of diseases. For example, the
prime cause of the plague is the plague bacillus, but secondary causes
of the plague are filth, rats, and the fleas that transfer the plague
bacillus from rats to man. By the prime cause of a disease, I mean
one that is found in every case of the disease.
Cancer, above all other diseases, has countless secondary causes.
Almost anything can cause cancer. But, even for cancer, there is only
one prime cause. The prime cause of cancer is the replacement of the
respiration of oxygen (oxidation of sugar) in normal body cells by
fermentation of sugar.
All normal body cells meet their energy needs by respiration of oxygen,
whereas cancer cells meet their energy needs in great part by fermentation.
All normal body cells are thus obligate aerobes, whereas all cancer
cells are partial anaerobes. From the standpoint of the physics and
chemistry of life this difference between normal and cancer cells
is so great that one can scarcely picture a greater difference. Oxygen
gas, the donor of energy in plants and animals, is dethroned in the
cancer cells and replaced by the energy yielding reaction of the lowest
living forms, namely the fermentation of sugar.
In every case, during the cancer development, the oxygen respiration
always falls, fermentation appears, and the highly differentiated
cells are transformed into fermenting anaerobes, which have lost all
their body functions and retain only the now useless property of growth
and replication. Thus, when respiration disappears, life does not
disappear, but the meaning of life disappears, and what remains are
growing machines that destroy the body in which they grow.
All carcinogens impair respiration directly or indirectly by deranging
capillary circulation, a statement that is proven by the fact that
no cancer cell exists without exhibiting impaired respiration. Of
course, respiration cannot be repaired if it is impaired at the same
time by a carcinogen.
To prevent cancer it is therefore proposed first to keep the speed
of the blood stream so high that the venous blood still contains sufficient
oxygen; second, to keep high the concentration of hemoglobin in the
blood; third, to add always to the food, even of healthy people, the
active groups of the respiratory enzymes; and to increase the doses
of these groups, if a precancerous state has already developed. If
at the same time exogenous carcinogens are excluded rigorously, then
much of the endogenous cancer may be prevented today.
These proposals are in no way utopian. On the contrary, they may be
realized by everybody, everywhere, at any hour. Unlike the prevention
of many other diseases, the prevention of cancer requires no government
help, and not much money.
Many experts agree that one could prevent about 80% of all cancers
in man, if one could keep away the known carcinogens from the normal
body cells. But how can the remaining 20%, the so-called spontaneous
cancers, be prevented? It is indisputable that all cancer could be
prevented if the respiration of body cells were kept intact.
Nobody today can say that one does not know what the prime cause of
cancer is. On the contrary, there is no disease whose prime cause
is better known, so that today ignorance is no longer an excuse for
avoiding measures for prevention. That the prevention of cancer will
come there is no doubt. But how long prevention will be avoided depends
on how long the prophets of agnosticism will succeed in inhibiting
the application of scientific knowledge in the cancer field. In the
meantime, millions of men and women must die of cancer unnecessarily.
The Prime Cause and Prevention of Cancer (Revised), by Dr. Otto Warburg
The Prime Cause and Prevention of Cancer
with two prefaces on prevention
Revised lecture at the meeting of the Nobel-Laureates on June 30,
1966
at Lindau, Lake Constance, Germany
by
Otto Warburg
Director, Max Planck-Institute for Cell Physiology,
Berlin-Dahlem
English Edition by Dean Burk
National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland, USA
The Second Revised Edition
Published by Konrad Triltsch, Würzburg, Germany
1969
Preface to the Second Revised German Edition of the Lindau Lecture
(The way to prevention of cancer)
Since the Lindau lecture of June 1966 many physicians have examined
- not unsuccessfully - the practical consequences of the anaerobiosis
of cancer cells. The more who participate in these examinations, the
sooner will we know what can be achieved. It is a unique aspect of
these examinations that they can be carried out on human patients,
on the largest scale, without risk; whereas experiments on animals
have beenmisleading many times. The cure of human cancer will be the
resultant of biochemistry of cancer and of biochemistry of man.
A list of selected active groups of respiratory enzymes will soon
be published, to which we recently added cytohemin and d-amino-Levulinic
acid, the precursor of oxygen-transferring hemins. In the meantime
commercial vitamin preparations may be used that contain, besides
other substances, many active groups of the respiratory enzymes. Most
of these may be added to the food. Cytohemin and vitamin B 12 may
be given subcutaneously. (A synonym of "active group" is
prosthetic" group of an enzyme.)
There exists no alternative today to the prevention of cancer as proposed
at Lindau. It is the way that attacks the prime cause of cancer most
directly and that is experimentally most developed. Indeed millions
of experiments in man, through the effectiveness of some vitamins,
have shown, that cell respiration is impaired if the active groups
of the respiratory enzymes are removed from the food; and that cell
respiration is repaired at once, if these groups are added again to
the food. No way can be imagined that is scientifically better founded
to prevent and cure a disease, the prime cause of which is an impaired
respiration. Neither genetic codes of anaerobiosis nor cancer viruses
are alternatives today, because no such codes and no such viruses
in man have been discovered so far; but anaerobiosis has been discovered.
8
What can be achieved by the active groups, when tumors have already
developed? The answer is doubtful, because tumors live in the body
almost anaerobically, that is under conditions that the active groups
cannot act.
On the other hand, because young metastases live in the body almost
aerobically, inhibition by the active groups should be possible. Therefore
we propose first to remove all compact tumors, which are the anaerobic
foci of the metastasis. Then the active group should be added to the
food, in the greatest possible amount, for many years, even for ever.
This is a promising task. If it succeeds, then cancer will be a harmless
disease.
Moreover, we discovered recently a) in experiments with growing cancer
cells in vitro that very low concentrations of some selected active
groups inhibit fermentation and the growth of cancer cells completely,
in the course of a few days. From these experiments it may be concluded
that de-differentiated cells die if one tries to normalize their metabolism.
It is a result that is unexpected and that encourages the task of
inhibiting the growth of metastases with active enzyme groups.
a) In press in Hoppe-Seylers Zeitschrift für Physiologische Chemie
1967. 10 g riboflavin per ccm or 10 g d-Aminolevulinic acid inhibit
in vitro growth and fermentation completely but inhibit respiration
less. As expected, ascites cancer in vivo is not cured.
As emphasized, it is the first precondition of the proposed treatment
that all growing body cells be saturated with oxygen. It is a second
precondition that exogenous carcinogens be kept away, at least during
the treatment. All carcinogens impair respiration directly or indirectly
by deranging capillary circulation, a statement that is proved by
the fact that no cancer cell exists, the respiration of which is not
impaired. Of course, respiration cannot be repaired if it is impaired
at the same time by carcinogens.
It has been asked after the Lindau lecture why the repair of respiration
by the active groups of the enzymes was proposed as late as 1966,
although the fermentation of the cancer cell was discovered as early
as 1923. Why was so much time lost?
He who asked this questions ignored that in 1923 the chemical mechanism
of enzyme action was still a secret of living nature alone. 1 The
first active group of an enzyme, "Iron, the Oxygen-Transferring
Part of the Respiratory Enzyme" was discovered in 1942. There
followed in two decades the discoveries of the O2-transferring metalloproteins,
the flavoproteins and the pyridinproteins, a period that was concluded
by the "Heavy Metals as Prosthetic Groups of Enzymes" 3
and by the "Hydrogen Transferring Enzymes" 4 in 1947 to
1949.
Moreover, during the first decades after 1923 glycolysis and anaerobiosis
were constantly confused, so that nobody knew what was specific for
tumors. The three famous and decisive discoveries of DEAN BURK and
colleagues 5 of the National Cancer Institute at Bethesda were of
the years 1941, 1956 and 1964: first, that the metabolism of the regenerating
liver, which grows more rapidly than most tumors, is not cancer metabolism,
but perfect aerobic embryonic metabolism; second, that cancer cells,
descended in vitro from one single normal cell, were in vivo the more
malignant, the higher the fermentation rate; third, that in vivo growing
hepatomas, produced in vivo by different carcinogens, were in vivo
the more malignant, the higher the fermentation rate. Furthermore,
the very unexpected and fundamental fact, that tissue culture is carcinogenic
and that a too low oxygen pressure is the intrinsic cause were discovered
6-8 in the years 1927 to 1966. Anaerobiosis of cancer cells was an
established fact only since 1960 when methods were developed 7 to
measure the oxygen pressure inside of tumors in the living body.
This abridged history shows that even the greatest genius would not
have been able to propose in 1923, what was proposed at Lindau in
1966. As unknown as the prime cause of cancer was in 1923 was the
possibility to prevent it.
Life without oxygen in a living world that has been created by oxygen
9 was so unexpected that it would have been too much to ask that anaerobiosis
of cancer cells should be accepted at once by all scientists. But
most of the resistance disappeared when at Lindau it was explained
that on the basis of anaerobiosis there is now a real chance to get
rid of this terrible disease, if man is willing to submit to experiments
and facts. It is true that more than 40 years were necessary to learn
how to do it. But 40 years is a short time in the history of science.10
Wiesenhof über Idar-Oberstein, August 1967 OTTO WARBURG
Two years after the Lindau lecture LINUS PAULING (Science Vol. 160,
Page 265, 1968) proposed to control mental diseases by adding to the
food the active groups of respiratory enzymes. But here the experimental
basis was lacking. No mental disease is known so far, the prime cause
of which is an impairment of the respiration of brain cells.
Preface to the First edition
(Prevention of endogenous cancer)
Most experts agree that nearly 80% of cancers could be prevented,
if all contact with the known exogenous carcinogens could be avoided.
But how can the remaining 20%, the endogenous or so-called spontaneous
cancers, be prevented?
Because no cancer cell exists, the respiration of which is intact
1, it cannot be disputed that cancer could be prevented if the respiration
of the body cells would be kept intact.
Today we know two methods to influence cell respiration. 1 The first
is to decrease the oxygen pressure in growing cells. If it is so much
decreased that the oxygen transferring enzymes are no longer saturated
with oxygen, respiration can decrease irreversibly and normal cells
can be transformed into facultative anaerobes.
The second method to influence cell respiration in vivo is to add
the active groups of the respiratory enzymes to the food of man. Lack
of these groups impairs cell respiration and abundance of these groups
repairs impaired cell respiration - a statement that is proved by
the fact that these groups are necessary vitamins for man. 2
To prevent cancer it is therefore proposed first to keep the speed
of the blood stream so high that the venous blood still contains sufficient
oxygen; second, to keep high the concentration of hemoglobin in the
blood; third to add always to the food, even of healthy people, the
active groups of the respiratory enzymes; and to increase the doses
of these groups, if a precancerous state 3 has already developed.
If at the same time exogenous carcinogens are excluded rigorously,
then most cancers may be prevented today.
These proposals are in no way utopian. On the contrary, they may be
realized by everybody, everywhere, at any hour. Unlike the prevention
of many other diseases the prevention of cancer requires no government
help, and no extra money.
Wiesenhof, August 1966 OTTO WARBURG
The Prime Cause and Prevention of Cancer
(Revised Lindau Lecture)
By OTTO WARBURG
(Director, Max Planck Institute for Cell Physiology,
Berlin-Dahlem, Germany)
English Edition by DEAN BURK, National Cancer Institute,
Bethesda, Maryland
(Note by DEAN BURK: Adapted from a lecture originally delivered by
O. Warburg at the 1966 annual meeting of Nobelists at Lindau, Germany.
O. Warburg won the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1931 for his discovery
of the oxygen transferring enzyme of cell respiration, and was voted
a second Nobel Prize in 1944 for his discovery of the active groups
of the hydrogen transferring enzymes. Many universities, like Harvard,
Oxford, Heidelberg have offered him honorary degrees. He is a Foreign
member of the Royal Society of London, a Knight of the Order of Merit
founded by Frederick the Great, and was awarded the Great Cross with
Star and Shoulder Ribbon of the Bundesrepublik. His main interests
are Chemistry and Physics of Life. In both fields no scientist has
been more successful.)
There are prime and secondary causes of diseases. For example, the
prime cause of the plaque is the plaque bacillus, but secondary causes
of the plaque are filth, rats, and the fleas that transfer the plaque
bacillus from rats to man. By a prime cause of a disease I mean one
that is found in every case of the disease.
Cancer, above all other diseases, has countless secondary causes.
But, even for cancer, there is only one prime cause. Summarized in
a few words, the prime cause of cancer is the replacement of the respiration
of oxygen in normal body cells by a fermentation of sugar. All normal
body cells meet their energy needs by respiration of oxygen, whereas
cancer cells meet their energy needs in great part by fermentation.
All normal body cells are thus obligate aerobes, whereas all cancer
cells are partial anaerobes. From the standpoint of the physics and
chemistry of life this difference between normal and cancer cells
is so great that one can scarcely picture a greater difference. Oxygen
gas, the donor of energy in plants and animals is dethroned in the
cancer cells and replaced by an energy yielding reaction of the lowest
living forms, namely, a fermentation of glucose.
The key to the cancer problem is accordingly the energetics of life,
which has been the field of work of the Dahlem institute since its
initiation by the Rockefeller Foundation about 1930. In Dahlem the
oxygen transferring and hydrogen transferring enzymes were discovered
and chemically isolated. In Dahlem the fermentation of cancer cells
was discovered decades ago; but only in recent years has is been demonstrated
that cancer cells can actually grow in the body almost with only the
energy of fermentation. Only today can one submit, with respect to
cancer, all the experiments demanded by PASTEUR and KOCH as proof
of the prime causes of a disease. If it is true that the replacement
of oxygen-respiration by fermentation is the prime cause of cancer,
then all cancer cells without exception must ferment, and no normal
growing cell ought to exist that ferments in the body.
An especially simple and convincing experiment performed by the Americans
MALMGREN and FLANEGAN confirms the view. If one injects tetanus spores,
which can germinate only at very low oxygen pressures, into the blood
of healthy mice, the mice do not sicken with tetanus, because the
spores find no place in the normal body where the oxygen pressure
is sufficiently low. Likewise, pregnant mice do not sicken when injected
with the tetanus spores, because also in the growing embryo no region
exists where the oxygen pressure is sufficiently low to permit spore
germination. However, if one injects tetanus spores into the blood
of tumor-bearing mice, the mice sicken with tetanus, because the oxygen
pressure in the tumors can be so low that the spores can germinate.
These experiments demonstrate in a unique way the anaerobiosis of
cancer cells and the non-anaerobiosis of normal cells, in particular
the non-anaerobiosis of growing embryos.
The Fermentation of Morris Hepatomas
A second type of experimentation demonstrates a quantitative connection
between fermentation of tumors and growth rate of tumors.
If one injects rats with cancer-inducing substances of different activities,
one can create, as HAROLD MORRIS of the National Cancer Institute
in Bethesda has found, liver cancers (hepatomas) of very different
degrees of malignancy. Thus, one strain of tumor may double its mass
in three days, another strain may require 30 days. Recently DEAN BURK
and MARK WOODS 3), also of the National Cancer Institute, measured
the in vitro rates of anaerobic fermentation in different lines of
these hepatomas, and obtained a curve (Fig. 1) that shows a quantitative
relationship between fermentation and growth rate, and therefore between
fermentation and malignancy, in these various tumor strains. The fermentation
increases with the malignancy, and indeed the fermentation increases
even faster than the malignancy.
Special interest attaches to the fermentation of the most slowly growing
hepatomas, because several investigators in the United States believed
that they had found *) that such tumors had no fermentation; that
is that anaerobiosis cannot be the prime cause of cancer.
*) For example see C. H. BÖHRINGER SON, Ingelheim am Rhein, the
factory Work - Journal "Das Medizinische Prisma" , Vol.
13, 1963. Here a lecture of VAN POTTER (Madison, Wisconsin) is reprinted
where owing to the slow-growing Morris-tumors anaerobiosis as prime
cause of cancer is rejected and the lack of "intracellular feeding
back" is claimed to be the real cause of cancer.
Fig. 1. Velocity of growth and fermentation of the Morris-Hepatomas,
according to DEAN BURK and MARK WOODS
DEAN BURK and MARK WOODS saw immediately from their curves that in
the region of the zero point the rate of fermentation was so small
that it could no longer be measured by the usual gross methodology
employed by the aforementioned workers, whereas in the same region
the smallest growth rate was always easily measurable. BURK and WOODS
saw, in other words, that in the region of the zero point of their
curves the growth test was more sensitive than the usual fermentation
test. With refined and adequate methods for measuring fermentation
of sugar (glucose) they found, what any physical chemist after a glance
at the curve would realize, that even the most slow-growing Morris
hepatomas fermented sugar.
The results of DEAN BURK and MARK WOODS were confirmed and extended
by other workers with independent methods. PIETRO GULLINO, also in
Bethesda, developed a perfusion method whereby a Morris hepatoma growing
in the living animal could be perfused for long periods of time, even
weeks, by means of a single artery and single vein, and the blood
entering and leaving any given tumor could be analyzed. GULLINO found
with this method that the slow-growing Morris hepatomas always produced
fermentation lactic acid during their growth. This was in contrast
to liver, where, as known since the days of CLAUDE BERNARD, lactic
acid is not produced but consumed by liver; the difference between
liver and Morris tumors in vivo is thus infinite (+ vs. -). GULLINO
further found that tumors grow in vivo with diminished oxygen consumption.
In summary, GULLINO's findings indicate that the slow-growing Morris
hepatomas are partial anaerobes. SILVIO FIALA, a biochemist at the
University of Southern California, found that not only did the slow-growing
hepatomas produce lactic acid, but also that the number of their oxygen-respiring
grana was reduced.
The slow-growing Morris hepatomas are therefore far removed from having
refuted the anaerobiosis of tumors. On the contrary, they are the
best proof of this distinctive characteristic. For forty years cancer
investigators have searched for a cancer that did not ferment. When
finally a non-fermenting tumor appeared to have been found in the
slow-growing Morris tumors, it was shown to be a methodological error.
Transformation of Embryonic Metabolism into Cancer Metabolism
A third type of experiment, from the institute in Dahlem with coworkers
GAWEHN, GEISSLER and LORENZ, is likewise highly pertinent. Having
established that anaerobiosis is that property of cancer cells that
distinguishes them from all normal body cells, we attacked the question,
namely, how normal body cells may become transformed into anaerobes
6)7)8).
If one puts embryonic mouse cells into a suitable culture medium saturated
with physiological oxygen pressures, they will grow outside the mouse
body, in vitro, and indeed as pure aerobes, with a pure oxygen respiration,
without a trace of fermentation. However, if during the growth one
provides an oxygen pressure so reduced that the oxygen respiration
is partially inhibited, the purely aerobic metabolism of the mouse
embryonic cells is quantitatively altered within 48 hours, in the
course of two cell divisions, into the metabolism characteristic of
fermenting cancer cells. Fig. 2 illustrates the very simple experimental
procedure involved.
If one then brings such cells, in which during their growth under
reduced oxygen pressure a cancer cell metabolism has been produced,
back under the original high oxygen pressure, and allows the cell
to grow further, the cancer metabolism remains. The transformation
of embryonic cell metabolism into cancer cell metabolism can thus
be irreversible, and important result, since the origin of cancer
cells from normal body cells is an irreversible process. It is equally
important that these body cells whose metabolism has thus been transformed
into cancer metabolism now continue to grow in vitro as facultative
anaerobes. The duration of our experiments is still too limited to
have yielded results of tests of inoculation of such cells back into
mice, but according to all previous indications such cells will later
grow as anaerobes upon transplantation into animals.
In any case, these experiments belong to the most important experiments
in the field of cancer investigation since the discovery of the fermentation
of tumors. For cancer metabolism, heretofore, measured so many thousand
of times, has now been induced artificially in body cells by the simplest
conceivable experimental procedure, and with this artificially induced
cancer metabolism the body cells divide and grow as anaerobes in vitro*).
*) The experiments were at once repeated, when they were published,
of course without acknowledgment. See for example Th. Goodfriend,
D. M. Sokol and N. O. Kaplan, J. molecular Biol. 15, 18, 1966.
In recent months we have further developed our experimental arrangements
so that we can measure manometrically the oxygen respiration and fermentation
of the growing mouse embryonic cells during the metabolic transformation.
Fig. 3 shows the experimental arrangement. We find by such experiments
that 35 percent inhibition of oxygen respiration already suffices
to bring about such a transformation during cell growth**). Oxygen
pressures that inhibit respiration 35 percent can occur at the end
of blood capillaries in living animals, so that the possibility arises
that cancer may result when too low oxygen pressures occur during
cell growth in animal bodies.
**) These experiments show, like the curve of Dean Burk and Mark Woods
in Fig. 1, that it is more correct to designate tumor cells as "partial
anaerobes" rather than "facultative anaerobes". A body
cell is transformed into a tumor cell if only a part of the respiration
is replaced by fermentation.
Fig. 2. Method to transform embryonic metabolism into cancer metabolism
by decreasing the oxygen pressure. The induction of cancers by solid
materials injected into animals is a further experimental indication
of this possibility. If one implants discs of solid substances under
the skin of rats, the discs will soon be surrounded by capsules of
living tissue that will be nourished with blood vessels from the hypodermis.
Sarcomas very frequently develop in these capsules. It is immaterial
whether the solid discs are chemically plastics, gold, or ivory, etc.
What produces the cancer is not the chemical nature of the solid discs,
but the special kind of blood nourishment supplied to the tissue encapsulating
the discs. This blood provision varies with the site and in adequacy
within a given animal, and induces cancer from the low oxygen pressure
in the encapsulating disc.
Fig. 3. Method to measure manometrically respiration and fermentation
during the transformation of embryonic into cancer metabolism*)
*) The vessels are not shaken, because shaking inhibits growth. Therefore,
the oxygen pressure in the liquid phase at the bottom of the vessels
is much lower than in the gas phase. For example, when the oxygen
pressure in the gas phase was 2000 mm H2O it was 130 mm H2O at the
bottom of the vessels. (O. Warburg, A. Geissler and S. Lorenz, Zeitschr.
Für Naturforschung 20b, 1070, 1965.)
Thermodynamics
If a lowered oxygen pressure during cell growth may cause cancer,
or, more generally, if any inhibition of respiration during growth
may cause cancer, then a next problem is to show why reduced respiration
induces cancer. Since we already know that with a lowering of respiration
fermentation results, we can re-express our question: Why does cancer
result if oxygen-respiration is replaced by fermentation?
The early history of life on our planet indicates that life existed
on earth before the earth's atmosphere contained free oxygen gas.
The living cells must therefore have been fermenting cells then, and,
as fossils show, they were undifferentiated single cells. Only when
free oxygen appeared in the atmosphere - some billion years ago -
did the higher development of life set in, to produce the plant and
animal kingdoms from the fermenting, undifferentiated single cells.
What the philosophers of life have called "Evolution créatrice"
has been and is therefore the work of oxygen.
The reverse process, the dedifferentiation of life, takes place today
in greatest amount before our eyes in cancer development, which is
another expression for dedifferentiation. To be sure, cancer development
takes place even in the presence of free oxygen gas in the atmosphere,
but this oxygen may not penetrate in sufficient quantity into the
growing body cells, or the respiratory apo-enzymes of the growing
body cells may not be saturated with the active groups. In any case,
during the cancer development the oxygen - respiration always falls,
fermentation appears, and the highly differentiated cells are transformed
to fermenting anaerobes, which have lost all their body functions
and retain only the now useless property of growth. Thus, when respiration
disappears, life does not disappear, but the meaning of life disappears,
and what remains are growing machines that destroy the body in which
they grow.
But why oxygen differentiates and why lack of oxygen dedifferentiates?
Nobody would dispute that the development of plants and animals and
man from unicellular anaerobes is the most improbable process of all
processes in the world. Thus there is no doubt, that EINSTEIN descended
from a unicellular fermenting organism - to illustrate the miracle,
molecular O2 achieved. But according to the thermodynamics of Boltzmann,
improbable processes require work to take place. It requires work
to produce temperature differences in a uniformly temperatured gas;
whereas the equalization of such temperature differences is a spontaneous
process that does not require work. It is the oxygen - respiration
that provides in life this work, and dedifferentiation begins at once
when respiration is inhibited in any way. In the language of thermodynamics,
differentiation represents a forced steady state, whereas dedifferentiation
- that is, cancer - is the true equilibrium state. Or, illustrated
by a picture: the differentiated body cell is like a ball on an inclined
plane, which, would roll down except for the work of oxygen-respiration
always preventing this. If oxygen respiration is inhibited, the ball
rolls down the plane to the level of dedifferentiation.
But why respiratory energy and not fermentation energy can differentiate,
whereas in general, for example in growth, respiratory energy and
fermentation energy are equivalent? Obviously, there would be no cancer
if there were not this discrimination of fermentation energy, that
is, if fermentation like respiration could differentiate. Then, when
respiration is replaced by fermentation, fermentation would take over
differentiation, and a high state of differentiation would be maintained
even in the fermenting body cells.
Chemistry
Physics cannot explain why the two kinds of energy are not equivalent
in differentiation; but chemistry may explain it. Biochemists know
that both respiration energy and fermentation energy do their work
as phosphate energy, but the ways of phosphorylation are different.
If one applies this knowledge to carcinogenesis, it seems that only
oxidative phosphorylation but not fermentative phosphorylation can
differentiate, a result, that may in future explain the mechanism
of differentiation.
Yet Biochemistry can explain already today why fermentation arises,
when respiration decreases. Figure 4 shows that the pathways of respiration
and fermentation are common as far as pyruvic acid. Then the pathways
diverge. The end product of fermentation is reached by one single
reaction, the reduction of pyruvic acid by dihydro-nicotinamide to
lactic acid. On the other hand, the end products of the oxidation
of pyruvic acid, H2O and CO2, are only reached after many additional
reactions. Therefore, when cells are harmed, it is probable that first
respiration is harmed. In this way the frequency of cancer is explained
by reasons of probability.
To sum up:
1.Impairment of respiration is more frequent than impairment of fermentation
because respiration is more complicated than fermentation.
2.The impaired respiration can be easily replaced by fermentation,
because both processes have a common catalyst, the nicotinamide.
3.The consequence of the replacement of respiration by fermentation
is mostly glycolysis, with death of the cells by lack of energy. Only
if the energy of fermentation is equivalent to the lost energy of
respiration, is the consequence anaerobiosis. Glycolysis means death
by fermentation, anaerobiosis means life by fermentation.
4.Cancer arises, because respiration, but not fermentation, can maintain
and create the high differentiation of body cells.
To conclude the discussion on the prime cause of cancer, the virus-theory
of cancer may be mentioned. It is the most cherished topic of the
philosophers of cancer. If it were true, it would be possible to prevent
and cure cancer by the methods of virology; and all carcinogens could
be eaten or smoked freely without any danger, if only contact with
the cancer virus would be avoided.
It is true that some virus-caused cancer b) occur in animals, but
no one sure human virus-cancer has been observed so far, whereas innumerable
substances cause cancer without viruses in animals and man. Thus viruses
do not meet the demands of Pasteur, that is must be possible to trace
the prime cause in every case of the disease. Therefore science classifies
viruses as remote causes of cancer, leading to anaerobiosis, the prime
cause, that meets the demands of Pasteur.
b) The chicken Rous sarcoma, which is labeled today as a virus tumor,
ferments glucose and lives as a partial anaerobe like all tumors.
O. WARBURG, Bioch. Zeitschrift 160, 307, 1925; F. WIND, Klinische
Wochenschrift, Nr. 30, 1926.
Many may remember how anaerobiosis as prime cause of cancer was recently
disputed emphatically, when one single cancer - the slow Morris hepatomas
- was believed (wrongly) to lack in fermentation. In contrast the
virus theory is adhered to although all cancers of man are lacking
in virus-origin. This means the surrender of the principles of Pasteur
and the relapse into bygone times of medicine.
Applications
Of what use is it to know the prime cause of cancer? Here is an example.
In Scandinavian countries there occurs a cancer of throat and esophagus
whose precursor is the so-called Plummer-Vinson syndrome. This syndrome
can be healed when one adds to the diet the active groups of respiratory
enzymes, for example: iron salts, riboflavin, nicotinamide, and pantothenic
acid. When one can heal the precursor of a cancer, one can prevent
this cancer. According to ERNEST WYNDER 3) of the Sloan-Kettering
Institute for Cancer Research in New York, the time has come when
one can exterminate this kind of cancer with the help of the active
groups of the respiratory enzymes.
It is of interest in this connection that with the help of one of
these active groups of the respiratory enzymes, namely nicotinamide,
tuberculosis can be healed quite as well as with streptomycin, but
without the side effects of the latter c). Since the sulfonamides
and antibiotics, this discovery made in 1945 is the most important
event in the field of chemotherapy generally, and encourages, in association
with the experiences in Scandinavia, efforts to prevent cancer by
dietary addition of large amounts of the active groups of the respiratory
enzymes
.
Since there can scarcely be overdosage, such experiments can do no
harm.
c) V. CHORINE: C. R. sci. Paris, 220, 150 (1945). - H. FUST and A.
STUDER,
Schweizerische Z. für allgemeine Pathologie, Band 14; Fasc 5
(1951).
I would like to go further and propose always making dietary additions
of large amounts of the active groups of the respiratory enzymes after
successful operations when there is danger from metastatic growths.
One could indeed never succeed in redifferentiating the dedifferentiated
cancer cells, since during the short duration of human life the probability
of such a back-differentiation is zero. But one might increase the
respiration of growing metastases, and thereby inhibit their fermentation,
and - on the basis of the curve of DEAN BURK and MARK WOODS obtained
with the Morris hepatomas - thereby inhibit the growth of metastases
to such an extent that they might become as harmless as the so-called
"sleeping" cancer cells in the prostates of elderly men.
A Second Example of Application
The physicist MANFRED VON ARDENNE has recently attacked the problem
of the therapy of cancer. ARDENNE discovered that cancer cells owing
to their fermentation, are more acid - inside and on their surface
- than normal cells and hence are more sensitive to high temperatures.
On this basis, he and his medical colleagues have treated cancer patients,
after surgical removal of the primary tumors, by raising the body
temperature of the patients to about 109º Fahrenheit for an hour,
in the hope that the metastases will then be killed or their growth
so slowed up as to become harmless. It is not yet decided whether
this idea can be described as a practical success. But the provisional
work of ARDENNE is already of great significance in a field where
hopes of conventional chemotherapy have been dimmed but might be brightened
by combination with extreme or moderate hyperthermy.
A third application.
According to an estimate by K. H. Bauer of the Cancer Institute in
Heidelberg, at least one million of the now living twenty five million
male inhabitants of West Germany will die of cancer of the respiratory
tract; still more will die from other cancer. When one considers that
cancer is a permanent menace, one realizes that cancer has become
one of the most dangerous menaces in the history of medicine.
Many experts agree that one could prevent about 80% of all cancers
in man, if one could keep away the known carcinogens from the normal
body cells. This prevention of cancer might involve no expenses, and
especially would require little further research to bring about cancer
prevention in up to 80 percent *).
*) Since this estimate was published, some thought 80% even to low.
Yet prevention remained taboo and early diagnosis was the only consolation
that was offered.
Why then does it happen that in spite of all this so little is done
towards the prevention of cancer? The answer has always been that
one does not know what cancer or the prime cause of cancer be, and
that one cannot prevent something that is not known.
But nobody today can say that one does not know what cancer and its
prime cause be. On the contrary, there is no disease whose prime cause
is better known, so that today ignorance is no longer an excuse that
one cannot do more about prevention. That prevention of cancer will
come there is no doubt, for man wishes to survive. But how long prevention
will be avoided depends on how long the prophets of agnosticism will
succeed in inhibiting the application of scientific knowledge in the
cancer field. In the meantime, millions of men and women must die
of cancer unnecessarily.
Literature to Preface of Second Edition:
1.WILLSTAETTER, WIELAND and EULER, Lectures on enzymes at the centenary
of the Gesellschaft Deutscher Naturforscher. Berichte der Deutschen
Chemischen Gesellschaft, 55, 3583, 1922. The 3 lectures of the 3 chemists
show that in the year 1922 the action of all enzymes was still a mystery.
No active group of any enzyme was known.
2.OTTO WARBURG, Biochem. Zeitschrift, 152, 479, 1924.
3.OTTO WARBURG, Heavy Metals as prosthetic groups of enzymes, Clarendon
Press, Oxford, 1949.
4.OTTO WARBURG, Wasserstoffübertragende Fermente, Verlag Werner
Sänger,
Berlin, 1948.
5.DEAN BURK, 1941. On the specificity of glycolysis in malignant liver
tumors as compared with homologous adult or growing liver tissues.
In Symposium of Respiratory Enzymes, Univ. of Wisconsin Press. pp.
235-245,1942. DEAN BURK, Science 123,314,1956. Woods, M. W., Sandford,
K. K., Burk, D., and Earle, W. R. J. National Cancer Institute 23,
1079-1088, 1959. DEAN BURK, Burk, D., Woods, M. and Hunter, J. On
the Significance of Glucolysis for Cancer Growth, with Special Reference
to Morris Rat Hepatomas. Journ. National Cancer Institute 38, 839-863,
1967.
6.O. WARBURG und F. KUBOWITZ, Bioch. Z. 189, 242, 1927; H. GOLDBLATT
und G. CAMERON, J. Exper. Med. 97, 525, 1953.
7.O. WARBURG, 17. Mosbacher Kolloquium, April 1966. Verlag Springer,
Heidelberg, 1966.
8.O. WARBURG, K. GAWEHN, A. W. GEISSLER, D. KAYSER and S. LORENZ,
Klinische Wochenschrift 43, 289, 1965.
9.O. WARBURG, Oxygen, The Creator of Differentiation, Biochemical
Energetics, Academic Press, New York, 1966.
10.O. WARBURG, New Methods of Cell Physiology, Georg Thieme, Stuttgart,
and Interscience Publishers, New York, 1962.
In 1904 there was very little cancer. Now there is an abundance of
cancer. What has changed? Can this be reversed? If you have cancer
or do not want to get cancer the information you and your family need
is on this web site.