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1. Little information is available about the pharmacokinetic interactions of anticancer drugs in man. However, clinically significant drug interactions do occur in cancer chemotherapy, and it is likely that important interactions have not been recognized. 2. Specific cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes have been recently shown to be involved in the metabolism of several essential anticancer agents. In particular, enzymes of the CYP3A subfamily play a role in the metabolism of many anticancer drugs, including epipodophyllotoxins, ifosphamide, tamoxifen, taxol and vinca alkaloids. CYP3A4 has been shown to catalyse the activation of the prodrug ifosphamide, raising the possibility that ifosphamide could be activated in tumour tissues containing this enzyme. 3. As examples of recently found, clinically significant interactions, cyclosporin considerably increases plasma doxorubicin and etoposide concentrations. Although cyclosporin and calcium channel blockers may influence the pharmacokinetics of certain anticancer agents by inhibiting their CYP3A mediated metabolism, it is more likely that these P-glycoprotein inhibitors inhibit P-glycoprotein mediated drug elimination. 4. Appropriate caution should be exercised when combining P-glycoprotein inhibitors and potential CYP3A inhibitors with cancer chemotherapy.  相似文献   

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Purpose

In many cancer patients, the malignancy causes reduced hepatic drug clearance leading to potentially serious complications from the use of anticancer drugs. The mechanisms underlying this phenomenon are poorly understood. We aimed to identify tumor-associated inflammatory pathways that alter drug response and enhance chemotherapy-associated toxicity.

Methods

We studied inflammatory pathways involved in extra-hepatic tumor mediated repression of CYP3A, a major hepatic drug metabolizing cytochrome P450 subfamily, using a murine Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm sarcoma model. Studies in IL-6 knockout mice determined the source of elevated IL-6 in tumor-bearing animals and monoclonal antibodies against IL-6 were used to intervene in this inflammatory pathway.

Results

Our studies confirm elevated plasma IL-6 levels and reveal activation of Jak/Stat and Mapk signalling pathways and acute phase proteins in livers of tumor-bearing mice. Circulating IL-6 was predominantly produced by the tumor xenograft, rather than being host derived. Anti IL-6 antibody intervention partially reversed tumor-mediated inflammation and Cyp3a gene repression.

Conclusions

IL-6 is an important player in cancer-related repression of CYP3A-mediated drug metabolism and activation of the acute phase response. Targeting IL-6 in cancer patients may prove an effective approach to alleviating cancer-related phenomena, such as adverse drug-related outcomes commonly associated with cancer chemotherapy.  相似文献   

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Different antidepressant drugs are currently used for the treatment of depression in cancer patients, such as second-generation antidepressants and, recently, the extracts of Hypericum perforatum. These agents are susceptible to metabolically-based drug interactions with anticancer drugs. The aim of the present article is to provide an updated review of clinically relevant metabolic drug interactions between selected anticancer drugs and antidepressants, focusing on selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and Hypericum extract. SSRIs can cause pharmacokinetic interactions through their in vitro ability to inhibit one or more cytochrome P450 isoenzymes (CYPs). SSRIs differ in their potential for metabolic drug interactions with anticancer drugs. Fluoxetine and paroxetine are potent inhibitors of CYP2D6 and administration of these SSRIs reduces the clinical benefit of an anticancer drug, such as tamoxifen, by decreasing the formation of active metabolites of this drug. Women with breast cancer who receive paroxetine in combination with tamoxifen are at increased risk for death. Other SSRIs, including citalopram, escitalopram, are weak or negligible inhibitors of CYP2D6 and are less likely to interact with anticancer drugs, while sertraline causes significant inhibition of this isoform only at high doses. Hypericum extract, by inducing both the CYP3A4 and the P-glycoprotein (P-gp), can reduce the plasma concentrations of different antineoplastic agents such as imatinib, irinotecan and docetaxel, thus reducing the clinical efficacy of these drugs. Although these interactions are often predictable, the use of fluoxetine, paroxetine and Hypericum extract should be avoided in cancer patients.  相似文献   

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Oral bioavailability of pharmacologically effective drugs is often limited by first-pass biotransformation. In humans, both hepatic and intestinal enzymes can catalyze the metabolism of a drug as it transits between the gastrointestinal lumen and systemic blood for the first time. Although a spectrum of drug biotransformations can occur during first-pass, the most common are oxidations catalyzed by cytochromes P450. It is the isozymes CYP2D6, CYP3A4, CYP1A2, CYP2C9 and CYP2C19 that are most often implicated in first-pass drug elimination. For any given substrate, enzyme specificity, enzyme content, substrate binding affinity and sensitivity to irreversible catalytic events all play a role in determining the overall efficiency, or intrinsic clearance, of elimination. Several models have been proposed over the past twenty-five years that mathematically describe the process of drug extraction across the liver. The most widely used, the well-stirred model, has also been considered for depiction of first-pass drug elimination across the intestinal wall. With these models it has been possible to examine sources of interindividual variability in drug bioavailability including, variable constitutive enzyme expression (both genetic and environmentally determined), enzyme induction by drugs, disease and diet, and intrinsic or acquired differences in plasma protein binding and organ blood flow (food and drug effects). In recent years, the most common application of hepatic clearance models has been the determination of maximum organ availability of a drug from in vitro derived estimates of intrinsic metabolic clearance. The relative success of the in vitro-in vivo approach for both low and highly extracted drugs has led to a broader use by the drug industry for a priori predictions as part of the drug selection process. A considerable degree of effort has also been focused on gut wall first-pass metabolism. Important pathways of intestinal Phase II first-pass metabolism include the sulfation of terbutaline and isoproterenol and glucuronidation of morphine and labetalol. It is also clear that some of the substrates for CYP3A4 (e.g., cyclosporine, midazolam, nifedipine, verapamil and saquinavir) undergo significant metabolic extraction by the gut wall. For example, the first-pass extraction of midazolam by the intestinal mucosa appears, on average, to be comparable to extraction by the liver. However, many other CYP3A substrates do not appear susceptible to a gut wall first-pass, possibly because of enzyme saturation during first-pass or a limited intrinsic metabolic clearance. Both direct biochemical and indirect in vivo clearance data suggest significant inter-individual variability in gut wall CYP3A-dependent metabolism. The source of this constitutive variability is largely unknown. Because of their unique anatomical location, enzymes of the gut wall may represent an important and highly sensitive site of metabolically-based interactions for orally administered drugs. Again, interindividual variability may make it impossible to predict the likelihood of an interaction in any given patient. Hopefully, though, newer models for studying human gut wall metabolic extraction will provide the means to predict the average extraction ratio and maximum first-pass availability of a putative substrate, or the range of possible inhibitory or inductive changes for a putative inhibitor/inducer.  相似文献   

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Although activity of cytochrome P450 isoenzymes (CYPs) plays a major role in the fate of anticancer agents in patients, there are relatively few clinical studies that evaluate drug metabolism with therapeutic outcome. Nevertheless, many clinical reports in various non-oncology fields have shown the dramatic importance of CYP activity in therapeutic efficacy, safety and interindividual variability of drug pharmacokinetics. Moreover, variability of drug metabolism in the liver as well as in cancer cells must also be considered as a potential factor mediating cancer resistance.This review underlines the role of drug metabolism mediated by CYPs in pharmacokinetic variability, drug resistance and safety. As examples, biotransformation pathways of tamoxifen, paclitaxel and imatinib are reviewed.This review emphasises the key role of therapeutic drug monitoring as a complementary tool of investigation to in vitro data. For instance, pharmacokinetic data of anticancer agents have not often been published within subpopulations of patients who show ultra-rapid, extensive or poor metabolism (e.g. due to CYP2D6 and CYP2C19 genotypes).Besides kinetic variability in the systemic circulation, induction of CYP activity may participate in creating drug resistance by speeding up the cancer agent degradation specifically in the target cells. For one cancer agent, various mechanisms of resistance are usually identified within different cell clones. This review also tries to emphasise that drug resistance mediated by CYP activity in cancer cells should be taken into consideration to a greater degree.The unequivocal identification of the metabolising enzymes involved in clinical conditions will eventually allow improvement and individualisation of anticancer agent therapy, i.e. drug dosage and selection. In addition, a more complete understanding of the metabolism of anticancer agents will assist in the prediction of drug-drug interactions, as anticancer agent combinations are becoming more prevalent.  相似文献   

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INTRODUCTION: We have previously shown that human colorectal cancer tissue is able to inactivate the anticancer drug paclitaxel through cytochrome P450 (CYP)2C8 and CYP3A4 metabolisms. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether changes in the expression levels of genes coding for such enzymes are related to anticancer drug resistance after long-term exposure to the drug. METHODS: Human colorectal cancer cells (Caco-2) that are sensitive to paclitaxel were exposed to increasing concentrations of the drug from 0-250 nM during one year, in order to select paclitaxel-resistant cells. Subsequently, we compared the sensitivity to paclitaxel and the extent of expression of the CYP2C8, CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 genes in original and resistant cells. RESULTS: Resistant cancer cells displayed a 246-fold increased lethal dose (LD)50 to paclitaxel (p < 0.004) as compared with original cancer cells. A 4.4-fold (p = 0.005) enhancement of CYP2C8 expression and a 5.6-fold (p = 0.001) increase of multidrug resistance (MDR)1 expression was observed in resistant cells exposed to paclitaxel. When paclitaxel was removed from the culture medium, CYP2C8, but not MDR1 expression, reverted to basal levels and the resistance to paclitaxel decreased 3.2-fold (p = 0.005). No major changes in the expression levels of CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 were observed. CONCLUSIONS: Caco-2 cells are capable of increasing the expression levels of CYP2C8 as a response to long-term exposure to paclitaxel. This study provides evidence for a mechanism of acquired resistance to anticancer therapy based on the induction of anticancer-metabolizing enzymes.  相似文献   

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Active secretion and enterocytic drug metabolism barriers to drug absorption   总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22  
Intestinal phase I metabolism and active extrusion of absorbed drug have only recently been recognized as major determinants of oral drug bioavailability. Both CYP3A4, the major phase I drug metabolizing enzyme in humans, and the multidrug efflux pump, P-glycoprotein (P-gp), are present at high levels in the villus enterocytes of the small intestine, the primary site of absorption for orally administered drugs. Moreover, these proteins are induced by many of the same compounds and demonstrate a broad overlap in substrate and inhibitor specificities, suggesting that they act as a concerted barrier to drug absorption. Clinical studies have demonstrated that inhibition of CYP3A4-mediated intestinal metabolism can significantly improve the oral bioavailability of a wide range of drugs. Intestinal P-gp is a major route of elimination for both orally and intravenously administered anticancer drugs in animal models, and experiments with the Caco-2 cell line have provided strong evidence that inhibition of intestinal P-gp is another means by which oral drug bioavailability could be enhanced.  相似文献   

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《Drug metabolism reviews》2012,44(4):699-721
Human cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A subfamily members (mainly CYP3A4 and CYP3A5) mediate the metabolism of approximately half all marketed drugs and thus play a critical role in the drug metabolism. A huge number of studies on CYP3A-mediated drug metabolism in humans have demonstrated that CYP3A activity exhibits marked ethnic and individual variability, in part because of altered levels of CYP3A4 expression by various environmental factors and functionally important polymorphisms present in CYP3A5 gene. Accumulating evidence has revealed that CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 have a significant overlapping in their substrate specificity, inducers and inhibitors. Therefore, it is difficult to define their respective contribution to drug metabolism and drug-drug interactions. Furthermore, P-glycoprotein and CYP3A are frequently co-expressed in the same cells and share a large number of substrates and modulators. The disposition of such drugs is thus affected by both metabolism and transport. In this review, we systematically summarized the frequently used CYP3A probe drugs, inducers and inhibitors, and evaluated their current status in drug development and research.  相似文献   

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Drugs as CYP3A probes, inducers, and inhibitors   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Human cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A subfamily members (mainly CYP3A4 and CYP3A5) mediate the metabolism of approximately half all marketed drugs and thus play a critical role in the drug metabolism. A huge number of studies on CYP3A-mediated drug metabolism in humans have demonstrated that CYP3A activity exhibits marked ethnic and individual variability, in part because of altered levels of CYP3A4 expression by various environmental factors and functionally important polymorphisms present in CYP3A5 gene. Accumulating evidence has revealed that CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 have a significant overlapping in their substrate specificity, inducers and inhibitors. Therefore, it is difficult to define their respective contribution to drug metabolism and drug-drug interactions. Furthermore, P-glycoprotein and CYP3A are frequently co-expressed in the same cells and share a large number of substrates and modulators. The disposition of such drugs is thus affected by both metabolism and transport. In this review, we systematically summarized the frequently used CYP3A probe drugs, inducers and inhibitors, and evaluated their current status in drug development and research.  相似文献   

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Cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzymes have the capability of playing key metabolic roles in several aspects of cancer as a consequence of their unusually broad substrate specificities. CYP450 are also prominent players in the metabolism of anticancer therapeutic drugs, enhancing or diminishing the efficacy of the drugs depending on whether the drug or its metabolites are efficacious. As CYP450 enzymes are also found in lung tissue, lung metabolism can be of importance to the bioactivation of some anticancer agents. The presence of individual forms of CYP450 has been investigated in lung tumor to determine whether intra-tumor metabolism of anticancer agents by CYP450 could occur and thus influence the response of tumor to these agents. Differences in drug metabolism between normal and cancerous lung tissue have been shown to exist, therefore; the variable expression of CYP450 between tumor and normal tissue can provide a basis for selective sensitivity of tissue to anticancer drugs, thereby localizing drug actions to tumor. This review gives a detailed picture of the expression of CYP450 in lung tumor and the role of this enzyme in lung tumor in the fate of anticancer drugs.  相似文献   

14.
Cancer treatment and pharmacogenetics of cytochrome P450 enzymes   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Summary For the treatment of cancer, the window between drug toxicity and suboptimal therapy is often narrow. Interindividual variation in drug metabolism therefore complicates therapy. Genetic polymorphisms in phase I and phase II enzymes may explain part of the observed interindividual variation in pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of anticancer drugs. The cytochrome P450 superfamily is involved in many drug metabolizing reactions. Information on variant alleles for the different isoenzymes of this family, encoding proteins with decreased enzymatic activity, is rapidly growing. The ultimate goal of ongoing research on these enzymes would be to enable pharmacogenetic screening prior to anticancer therapy. At this moment, potential clinically relevant application of CYP450 pharmacogenetics for anticancer therapy may be found for CYP1A2 and flutamide, CYP2A6 and tegafur, CYP2B6 and cyclophosphamide, CYP2C8 and paclitaxel, CYP2D6 and tamoxifen, and CYP3A5. For this latter enzyme, the drugs of interest still need to be identified.  相似文献   

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Cancer chemotherapy is characterized by significant interindividual variations in systemic clearance, therapeutic response, and toxicity. These variations are due mainly to genetic factors, leading to alterations in drug metabolism and/or target proteins. The aim of this study was to determine, using a human liver bank (N=14), the interindividual variations in the expression and activity of liver enzymes that metabolize the investigational anticancer drug 5,6-dimethylxanthenone-4-acetic acid (DMXAA), i.e cytochrome P450 (CYP1A2) and uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferase (UGT1A9/2B7). In addition, interindividual variations in enzyme inhibition, hydrolysis of DMXAA acyl glucuronide (DMXAA-G) by plasma and hepatic microsomes, and the binding of DMXAA by plasma proteins also were examined. The results indicated that there was approximately one order of magnitude of interindividual variation in the expression of CYP1A2 and UGT2B7, activity of the enzymes toward DMXAA, and inhibition potency (IC(50)) by diclofenac, cyproheptadine, and alpha-naphthoflavone. The enzyme activities toward DMXAA and IC(50) values were closely correlated with enzyme expression. There was a smaller (2- to 3-fold) variation in the enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis of DMXAA acyl glucuronide in human plasma and liver microsomes (N=6) and in the binding of DMXAA by plasma proteins in humans. In conclusion, the interindividual variability of DMXAA disposition observed in vitro might reflect the greater elimination variability (>one order of magnitude) in Phase I cancer patients. The variability in DMXAA clearance in these cancer patients would be due mainly to differences in its metabolism and its metabolic inhibition by co-administered drugs. To a lesser extent, variability in the clearance of DMXAA could be due to the hydrolysis of its acyl glucuronide and/or its binding to plasma proteins. Further study is needed to examine the genotype-phenotype relationship, and the result, together with therapeutic drug monitoring may provide a useful strategy for optimizing DMXAA treatment.  相似文献   

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The novel finding that grapefruit juice can markedly augment oral drug bioavailability was based on an unexpected observation from an interaction study between the dihydropyridine calcium channel antagonist, felodipine, and ethanol in which grapefruit juice was used to mask the taste of the ethanol. Subsequent investigations showed that grapefruit juice acted by reducing presystemic felodipine metabolism through selective post-translational down regulation of cytochrome P450 3A4 (CYP3A4) expression in the intestinal wall. Since the duration of effect of grapefruit juice can last 24  h, repeated juice consumption can result in a cumulative increase in felodipine AUC and Cmax. The high variability of the magnitude of effect among individuals appeared dependent upon inherent differences in enteric CYP3A4 protein expression such that individuals with highest baseline CYP3A4 had the highest proportional increase. At least 20 other drugs have been assessed for an interaction with grapefruit juice. Medications with innately low oral bioavailability because of substantial presystemic metabolism mediated by CYP3A4 appear affected by grapefruit juice. Clinically relevant interactions seem likely for most dihydropyridines, terfenadine, saquinavir, cyclosporin, midazolam, triazolam and verapamil and may also occur with lovastatin, cisapride and astemizole. The importance of the interaction appears to be influenced by individual patient susceptibility, type and amount of grapefruit juice and administration-related factors. Although in vitro findings support the flavonoid, naringin, or the furanocoumarin, 6',7'-dihydroxybergamottin, as being active ingredients, a recent investigation indicated that neither of these substances made a major contribution to grapefruit juice-drug interactions in humans.  相似文献   

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Imidafenacin (IM), 4-(2-methyl-1H-imidazol-1-yl)-2,2-diphenylbutanamide, is a newly synthesized antimuscarinic drug developed for the treatment of overactive bladder. To predict clinically relevant drug interactions in the metabolism of IM, the paper investigated: (1) the major enzymes responsible for the metabolism of IM, (2) the effects of concomitant drugs on the inhibition of metabolism of IM, and (3) the effects of IM and its metabolites on the inhibition of human cytochrome P450 (CYP). The elimination of IM and production of oxidative metabolites were mainly catalysed by recombinant CYP3A4, and the elimination of IM by human liver microsomes (HLM) was markedly inhibited by co-incubation with ketoconazole. The production of the N-glucuronide metabolite was only catalysed by recombinant UGT1A4. Clinically established CYP3A4 inhibitors including itraconazole, ketoconazole, erythromycin and clarithromycin inhibited the elimination of IM in HLM. IM and its major metabolites did not affect the activities of CYP enzymes in vitro. The results suggest that the major enzymes responsible for the metabolism of IM are CYP3A4 and UGT1A4, and oxidative metabolism of IM is reduced by concomitant administration of CYP3A4 inhibitors. In contrast, IM and its metabolites have no inhibitory effect on the CYP-mediated metabolism of concomitant drugs.  相似文献   

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