Zhang Tingdong

Summary

Zhang Tingdong (Chinese: 张亭栋; pinyin: Zhāng Tíngdòng; born on November 8, 1932) is a Chinese medical scientist, pharmaceutical chemist, and educator at Harbin Medical University, 1st affiliated Hospital, and is best known for discovering of using arsenic trioxide to treat leukemia, which is regarded as a significant breakthrough of anti-leukemia medicine in the 20th Century and improvement in the lives of people with leukemia.[1]

Early life and education edit

Zhang was born November 8, 1932.

In 1950, Zhang graduated from Harbin Medical University. In 1963, he earned a doctorate degree in Traditional Chinese Medicine. Ever since, he has worked in the 1st Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University, specializing in Hematology of Integrative of Chinese and Western Medicine[2]

Career edit

In March 1971, Han Taiyun of the 1st Affiliated Hospital started to treat cancer patients with a formula he collected from traditional Chinese medicine doctors. It was presumably an oral formula, and contained a mixture of many ingredients, including arsenic chemicals, mercury chloride, and cinobufagin venom toad. Later, Han Taiyun turned the formula into a intramuscular injection called "713" or "cancer spirit". For certain tumors, it worked and became a local hit. But Han Taiyun gave it up because the formula was too toxic for some patients, with side effects including renal toxicity and hypertension.

Zhang is a doctor of Traditional Chinese Medicine at First Clinical Hospital, affiliated with Harbin Medical University in Harbin, China.[3]

In 1972, Zhang picked up Han Taiyun's work or started to cooperate with Han Taiyun to continue working on this formula. Instead of working on many cancers, Zhang Tingdong focused mainly on leukemia. Also, instead of using a mixture of many ingredients, Zhang Tingdong tested each individual component of the formula. He found that while the arsenic component is effective against leukemia, mercury chloride and cinobufagin venom toad were not, and caused renal toxicity and high blood pressure respectively. Their first paper was published in 1973, attributed to Zhang Ting, Pengfei Zhang, Wang Shouren, Han Taiyn at the Heilongjiang medical reports. They used "cancer injection" (also called "cancer spirit No. 1") in the treatment of 6 cases of patients with chronic myeloid leukemia. They used arsenic trioxide as the main ingredient, with some trace "pink powder (mercury chloride)". After the treatment, the 6 patients, including a chronic acute leukemia patient, experienced improved symptoms. They also mentioned that arsenic trioxide is effective in treating acute leukemia.[4]

Zhang's results were initially published on Chinese-language literature. In the 1990s, he began to write in English, exposing this method to a broader scientific community. His work became widely known after 1996, when he co-authored a Blood article with Chen Zhu about this method.[5][6]

Awards edit

  • State Science and Technology Award [zh], 2nd grade.[5]
  • A "DuPont Science and Technology Award", according to Chinese sources.[5]
  • China Patent Award.[5]
  • An "International Patent Award", according to Chinese sources.[5]
  • 2011 Outstanding Achievement in Life Sciences (生命科学杰出成就奖). Presented by GSK China.[7]
  • 2015 Outstanding Scientist Award. Presented by Hong Kong Qiu Shi Science and Technologies Foundation.[3]
  • 2020 Future Science Prize, Life Science Prize (private organization based in China.)[8]

References edit

  1. ^ "83-year-old doctor gets Qiu Shi Award for leukemia drug|WCT". wantchinatimes.com. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  2. ^ "Zhang Ting-dong -- A Pioneer in Treating Leukemia with Arsenous Acid". Chinese Journal of Integrative Medicine. 12 (2): 150–151. June 12, 2006. doi:10.1007/BF02857364. PMID 16800997. S2CID 1999956.
  3. ^ a b "TCM doctor receives 'grand award' from Qiu Shi foundation". chinadaily.com. September 20, 2015. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  4. ^ Team, Discuz! Team and Comsenz UI. "科学网—中药的科学研究丰碑(修改版) - 饶毅的博文". blog.sciencenet.cn. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  5. ^ a b c d e "张亭栋:一生一追求" [Zhang Tingdong: One life, one persuit]. 科学网. 2011-09-07. Archived from the original on 2018-07-19. Retrieved 2012-04-26.
  6. ^ Chen, Guo-Qiang; Shi, Xue-Geng; Tang, Wei; Xiong, Shu-Min; Zhu, Jun; Cai, Xun; Han, Ze-Guang; Ni, Jian-Hua; Shi, Gui-Ying; Jia, Pei-Ming; Liu, Meng-Min; He, Kai-Li; Niu, Chao; Ma, Jun; Zhang, Peng; Zhang, Ting-Dong; Paul, Pascale; Naoe, Tomoki; Kitamura, Kunio; Miller, Wilson; Waxman, Samuel; Wang, Zhen-Yi; de The, Hugues; Chen, Sai-Juan; Chen, Zhu (1997-05-01). "Use of Arsenic Trioxide (As2O3 ) in the Treatment of Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia (APL): I. As2O3 Exerts Dose-Dependent Dual Effects on APL Cells". Blood. 89 (9): 3345–3353. doi:10.1182/blood.V89.9.3354. ISSN 0006-4971. PMID 9129041. Retrieved 2024-03-04.
  7. ^ "葛兰素史克生命科学杰出成就奖及神经科学卓越奖公布" [GSK announces awards for Outstanding Achievement in Life Sciences and Neuroscience Excellence]. 科学网.
  8. ^ "2020 The Life Science Prize Laureates —— Tingdong Zhang - Home-Future Science Prize". www.futureprize.org.

External links edit

  • Top five medical innovations in China mainland since Xinhai revolution (1911): results of AME survey-002
  • Zhang in nytimes.com