Dr. Weeks’ Comment: Western Australia has a bright your medical doctor and researcher who my old friend and master Apitherapist Charlie Mraz would adore, were he still alive today. As the founder of the American Apitherapy Society (AAS) in 1985 and past President (as well as Editor of BeeWell – the Journal of the AAS), I posted many articles on bee venom therapy (search “venom” at www.weeksmd.com) am gratified that such a brilliant young scientist as Dr. Duffy has take up the challenge of demonstrating the benefits of bee venom therapy (BVT) for cancer. As I reported in 1993, she confirms:
“...a component of the venom called melittin is what had the killing effect. The researchers reproduced the melittin synthetically and found it mirrored the majority of the anti-cancer effects of the honeybee venom. “What melittin does is it actually enters the surface, or the plasma membrane and forms holes or pores and it just causes the cell to die,” Dr. Duffy said. The researchers also discovered within 20 minutes the melittin had another powerful effect. The component melittin in the venom is believed to have the killing effect. “We found it was interfering with the main messaging or cancer-signalling pathways that are fundamental for the growth and replication of cancer cells,” she said. It effectively shut down the signalling pathways for the reproduction of triple-negative and HER2 cancer cells. ‘Incredibly exciting discovery’, Chief Scientist says Dr. Duffy also examined the effect of melittin used in combination with existing chemotherapy drugs, such as docetaxel. She found the holes in breast cancer membranes caused by the melittin allowed the chemotherapy to enter the cell and worked extremely efficiently in reducing tumour growth in mice. “