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| Bicarbonate one central carbon atom surrounded by three oxygen atoms in a triogonal planer arrangement with a hydrogen atom attached to one of the oxygens. -Bicarbonate’s primary role is in pH buffering. Its administration has been studied as an adjuvant strategy to modify the tumor microenvironment. -Many solid tumors exhibit an acidic microenvironment due to high rates of glycolysis (the “Warburg effect”) and poor perfusion. Bicarbonate supplementation can buffer this acidity, raising the extracellular pH. -By modulating pH, bicarbonate may influence pathways tied to glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation Bicarbonate — usually discussed clinically as sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3; standard abbreviation HCO3−/NaHCO3) — is an endogenous extracellular buffer and alkalinizing agent rather than a conventional cytotoxic anticancer drug. It is formally classified as a small-molecule inorganic salt / systemic buffer therapy. In cancer research, its relevance comes from partial neutralization of acidic tumor extracellular pH, with downstream effects on invasion, immune suppression, and pH-dependent drug distribution. The best-supported oncology use-case is tumor-microenvironment buffering as an adjunct strategy; localized bicarbonate delivery has also been studied in hepatocellular carcinoma embolization settings. Major practical constraints are sodium load, gastrointestinal intolerance with oral dosing, and the fact that systemic homeostasis tightly limits how far tumor pH can be shifted. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Oral bicarbonate is readily absorbed, distributes mainly in extracellular fluid, and is rapidly integrated into normal acid-base physiology; IV administration is fully bioavailable. PK is less about classic tissue targeting and more about transient systemic buffering capacity. Delivery is constrained by gastric neutralization, GI intolerance, renal handling, CO2 generation, and sodium burden. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Bicarbonate is not primarily a direct high-concentration cytotoxin under standard systemic use. The main translational effect is extracellular pH modulation, not sustained intracellular drug-like exposure. In-vitro alkalinization experiments can overstate direct cancer-cell killing relative to what is usually achievable safely with oral systemic dosing. Clinical evidence status: Strong preclinical evidence; limited human evidence. Human oncology data are mainly small pilot/adjunct studies, including localized bicarbonate use with TACE and small supportive-care / feasibility studies of oral bicarbonate. There is no established broad anticancer monotherapy role. The extracellular pH of malignant solid tumors is acidic, in the range of 6.5 to 6.9, whereas the pHe of normal tissues is significantly more alkaline, 7.2 to 7.5Acidic pHe may induce release of cathepsin proteinase activity in vitro, which is generally believed to be involved in local invasion and tissue remodeling Cancer Mechanism Matrix
P: 0–30 min R: 30 min–3 hr G: >3 hr |
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| 5605- | NaHCO3, | A nonrandomized cohort and a randomized study of local control of large hepatocarcinoma by targeting intratumoral lactic acidosis |
| - | Trial, | HCC, | NA |
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