Title: Cancer Chemotherapy-1
1Cancer Chemotherapy-1
2Etiolopathology
50.2 Rang
3Apoptosis
- Programmed cell death
- Cascade of proteases initiate process
4Characteristics of Cancer Cells
- The problem
- Cancer cells divide rapidly (cell cycle is
accelerated) - They are immortal
- Cell-cell communication is altered
- uncontrolled proliferation
- invasiveness
- Ability to metastasise
5The Goal of Cancer Treatments
- Curative
- Total irradication of cancer cells
- Curable cancers include testicular tumors, Wills
tumor - Palliative
- Alleviation of symptoms
- Avoidance of life-threatening toxicity
- Increased survival and improved quality of life
- Adjuvant therapy
- Attempt to eradicate microscopic cancer after
surgery - e.g. breast cancer colorectal cancer
6Six Established Rx Modalities
- Surgery
- Radiotherapy
- Chemotherapy
- Endocrine therapy
- Immunotherapy
- Biological therapy
7Major approaches to therapy of cancers
8Cell Cycle Growth, Division
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10Cancer Chemotherapy
- After completion of mitosis, the resulting
daughter cells have two options - (1) they can either enter G1 repeat the cycle
or - (2) they can go into G0 and not participate in
the cell cycle. - Growth fraction - at any particular time some
cells are going through the cell cycle whereas
other cells are resting. - The ratio of proliferating cells to cells in G0,
is called the growth fraction. - A tissue with a large percentage of proliferating
cells few cells in G0 has a high growth
fraction. - Conversely, a tissue composed of mostly of cells
in G0 has a low growth fraction.
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12Cell Cycle Specific (CCS) Cell Cycle
Non-Specific Agents (CCNS)
13Log kill hypothesis
- According to the log-kill hypothesis,
chemotherapeutic agents kill a constant fraction
of cells (first order kinetics), rather than a
specific number of cells, after each dose - 1. Solid cancer tumors - generally have a low
growth fraction thus respond poorly to
chemotherapy in most cases need to be removed
by surgery - 2. Disseminated cancers- generally have a high
growth fraction generally respond well to
chemotherapy
14 15LOG kill hypothesis
- The example shows the effects of tumor burden,
scheduling, initiation/duration of treatment on
patient survival. - The tumor burden in an untreated patient would
progress along the path described by the RED LINE
- The tumor is detected (using conventional
techniques) when the tumor burden reaches 109
cells - The patient is symptomatic at 1010-1011 cells
- Dies at 1012 cells.
16Cancer Chemotherapy
- Combinations of agents with differing toxicities
mechanisms of action are often employed to
overcome the limited cell kill of individual anti
cancer agents. Each drug selected should be
effective alone - 3 advantages of combination therapy
- 1. Suppression of drug resistance - less chance
of a cell developing resistance to 2 drugs than
to 1 drug. - 2. Increased cancer cell kill - administration of
drugs with different mechanisms of action. - 3. Reduced injury to normal cells - by using a
combination of drugs that do not have overlapping
toxicities, we can achieve a greater anticancer
effect than we could by using any one agent alone.
17Resistance to Cytotoxic Drugs
- Increased expression of
- MDR-1 gene for a cell
- surface P-glycoprotein
- MDR-1 gene is involved
- with drug efflux
- Drugs that reverse MDR
- verapamil, quinidine,
- cyclosporine
- MDR increases resistance
- to natural drug products
- including the anthracyclines, vinca alkaloids,
and epipodophyllotoxins
18Modes of Resistance to Anticancer Drugs
19General problems with anticancer drugs
- Most of them are antiproliferative, i.e. they
damage DNA and so initiate apoptosis. - They also affect rapidly dividing normal cells.
- This leads to toxicity which are usually severe.
- To greater or lesser extent the following
toxicities are exhibits by all anticancer drugs.
20ADR of Antineoplastic Drugs in Humans
21Distinctive Toxicities of Some Anticancer Drugs
22Chemotherapeutic agents are much more toxic to
tissues that have a high growth fraction than to
tissues that have a low growth fraction.
- Proliferating cells are especially sensitive to
chemotherapy because cytotoxic drugs usually act
by disrupting DNA synthesis or mitosis, cellular
activities that only proliferating cells carry
out. - Unfortunately, toxicity to the anticancer agents
is to any rapidly dividing cells. (e.g. bone
marrow, hair follicles, sperm forming cells).
23Prevention or Management of Drug Induced
toxicities
- The toxicities of some anticancer drugs can be
well anticipated and hence be prevented by giving
proper medications - E.g. mesna is given to prevent hemorrhagic
cystitis by cyclophosphamide - Dexrazoxane, is used to reduce the risk of
anthracycline-induced cardiomyopathy
24Anti-cancer drugs