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Another Use for Methylene Blue: The Cancer Connection

Another Use for Methylene Blue: The Cancer Connection

Oncology · Integrative Medicine

Methylene Blue and Cancer: A Century-Old Dye With New Promise

Cancer cells are remarkably adaptable survivors. Solid tumors in particular tend to thrive in low-oxygen environments — a condition known as hypoxia — and conventional treatments like chemotherapy and radiation can inadvertently make this problem worse. A tumor deprived of oxygen can adapt, becoming more aggressive, more resistant to therapy, and better equipped to spread. It's one of the most frustrating paradoxes in oncology.

Enter methylene blue: a brilliant blue compound with a history stretching back to the textile industry of the 1800s. Originally synthesized as a fabric dye, it became the first fully synthetic drug used in clinical medicine — deployed against malaria in 1886. Today, researchers are revisiting this humble molecule with fresh eyes, and what they're finding is striking.

From restoring oxygen-carrying capacity in emergency medicine to showing early promise in oncology, methylene blue has accumulated an unusually broad portfolio of potential applications. Understanding why requires a look at what it does at the cellular level.

What Is Methylene Blue and How Does It Work?

Methylene blue is FDA-approved as a treatment for methemoglobinemia — a condition in which hemoglobin loses its ability to carry oxygen through the bloodstream, leading to oxygen deprivation in tissues and, if untreated, tissue death. Methylene blue reverses this through a series of biochemical steps that restore hemoglobin's oxygen-carrying function.

This mechanism — its ability to shuttle electrons and support cellular respiration — is central to many of its broader therapeutic applications. It acts as a mitochondrial electron carrier, helping cells produce energy more efficiently and reducing the oxidative stress that contributes to disease. In cancer contexts specifically, its ability to increase oxygen delivery to tumor sites without harming surrounding healthy tissue is particularly noteworthy.

On- and Off-Label Uses

The range of conditions currently being studied in connection with methylene blue is remarkable for a compound originally used to color cloth. Its anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and mitochondrial-supportive properties have made it a subject of interest across a wide range of disciplines.

Current and Emerging Applications

  • Shock states: Improves blood pressure in septic and anaphylactic shock by inhibiting guanylate cyclase.
  • Surgical visualization: Used to stain the thyroid, lymph nodes, and ureters during surgical procedures.
  • Neurological conditions: Under investigation for Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, traumatic brain injury, and ischemic stroke.
  • Psychiatric conditions: Being studied as adjunct therapy in bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, and schizophrenia.
  • COVID-19 and ARDS: Its anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties have drawn interest, though it is not FDA-approved for these conditions.
  • Oral pain in cancer patients: Provides relief from radiation-induced pain in head and neck cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy.

Promising Cancer Research: Photodynamic Therapy and Beyond

Perhaps the most compelling emerging use for methylene blue is in oncology, particularly when paired with photodynamic therapy (PDT). In this approach, methylene blue is used as a photosensitizer — a compound that, when activated by specific wavelengths of light, generates reactive oxygen species that destroy cancer cells from within.

Research into this combination has shown meaningful reductions in tumor size and metastatic potential across breast, colorectal, and ovarian cancers, with ovarian cancer showing the most promising early results. The mechanism — increasing oxygen delivery directly to tumor sites — directly counters one of the tumor microenvironment's most powerful defenses: hypoxia-driven therapy resistance.

Breast Cancer

Methylene blue combined with PDT has demonstrated reductions in tumor growth and spread in preclinical studies.

Colorectal Cancer

Early research suggests benefit when methylene blue is used as a photosensitizer, improving oxygen delivery to tumor sites.

Ovarian Cancer

In vivo studies show methylene blue metabolic therapy significantly restrains tumor growth — showing the strongest signal among cancers studied to date.

Androgen-Dependent and Independent Cancers

Beyond its use with photodynamic therapy, methylene blue is also being investigated for its effects on androgen-dependent and androgen-independent cancers — a category that includes primarily prostate cancer, as well as certain breast and ovarian cancers. Research presented at the American Association for Cancer Research has demonstrated that methylene blue targets these cancers at the cellular level, disrupting the migration of cancerous cells that would otherwise lead to metastasis.

This anti-migratory effect is significant: one of the most dangerous aspects of cancer is its ability to travel from the original tumor site to establish new colonies elsewhere in the body. Compounds that can interfere with this process, particularly without the toxicity profiles of conventional treatments, represent a meaningful area of investigation.

Promise With a Caution

Who Should Not Use Methylene Blue

Despite its promise, methylene blue is not appropriate for everyone. It should not be taken by individuals with G6PD deficiency, those currently taking antidepressants or ADHD medications, or those with severe renal impairment. As with all supplements and investigational agents, speak with your primary care provider before starting anything new.

The Bottom Line

Methylene blue represents a compelling example of an old compound finding new relevance. Its ability to improve oxygen delivery to tumor microenvironments, disrupt cancer cell migration, and enhance the efficacy of photodynamic therapy makes it one of the more intriguing subjects in integrative oncology research. While it is not a replacement for established cancer treatments, the emerging body of evidence warrants close attention from both clinicians and patients interested in complementary approaches.

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References

  1. Chen, Z., Han, F., Du, Y., Shi, H., & Zhou, W. (2023). Hypoxic microenvironment in cancer: molecular mechanisms and therapeutic interventions. Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy, 8(1), 70. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41392-023-01332-8
  2. Gilkes, D. (2019, November 7). Oxygen-starved tumor cells have survival advantage that promotes cancer spread. Johns Hopkins Medicine Newsroom. https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/news/newsroom/news-releases/2019/11/oxygen-starved-tumor-cells-have-survival-advantage-that-promotes-cancer-spread
  3. BASF. (2015). Pioneering thinker – then and now: Methylene blue. BASF Creating Chemistry Magazine. https://www.basf.com/global/en/media/magazine/creatingchemistrystories/2015/pioneer-thinker-then-and-now-methlyene-blue
  4. Farina Junior, J. A., Celotto, A. C., da Silva, M. F., & Evora, P. R. (2012). Guanylate cyclase inhibition by methylene blue as an option in the treatment of vasoplegia after a severe burn. Medical Science Monitor, 18(5), HY13–HY17. https://doi.org/10.12659/msm.882718
  5. Ostrovsky, A., & Afzal, M. (2026). Methylene blue. In StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK557593/
  6. da Veiga Moreira, J., Nleme, N., Schwartz, L., et al. (2024). Methylene Blue Metabolic Therapy Restrains In Vivo Ovarian Tumor Growth. Cancers, 16(2), 355. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16020355
  7. Taldaev, A., Terekhov, R., Nikitin, I., et al. (2023). Methylene blue in anticancer photodynamic therapy: systematic review of preclinical studies. Frontiers in Pharmacology, 14, 1264961. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2023.1264961
  8. Shanthi, P. T., Foes, A., & Munirathinam, G. (2019). Evaluating the therapeutic effects of methylene blue against prostate cancer [Abstract]. Cancer Research, 79(13 Suppl.), Abstract nr 2958. https://aacrjournals.org/cancerres/article/79/13_Supplement/2958/635047/

Author

Brooke Lounsbury

This content is for informational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Methylene blue is an FDA-approved treatment only for methemoglobinemia; all other applications discussed here are investigational or off-label. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting any new supplement or treatment.


About our editorial team

The TWC Editorial team is comprised of various wellness practitioners from physiotherapists, acupuncturists, fitness instructors, herbalists, and MDs.

This article does not constitute medical advice. Please consult a healthcare provider for proper diagnosis and treatment.
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