Introduction:
Cancer and Its Types:
1) Carcinoma – This
cancer begins in the skin or in tissues that line or cover internal organs.
There are different subtypes, including,
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Adenocarcinoma,
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Basal cell carcinoma,
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Squamous cell carcinoma and
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Transitional cell carcinoma
2) Sarcoma – This cancer begins in the connective or supportive tissues such as bone, cartilage, fat, muscle or blood vessels.
3) Leukaemia – This is cancer of the white blood cells. It starts in the bone marrow that is involved in the formation of blood cells.
4) Lymphoma and Myeloma – These cancers begin in the cells of the immune system.
5) Brain and Spinal cord Cancers – These are known as central nervous system cancers.
Anticancer Drugs:
Anti-cancer drugs are those medicines which are formulated in order to treat various types of cancer. The usual treatments of cancer are surgery, chemotherapy (treatment with anti-cancer drugs), radiations or some combination of these methods. Anti-cancer drugs are targeted to control and treat various cancers like, breast cancer, cervical cancer, lung cancer, head and neck cancer and ovarian cancer etc. Keep in mind anti-cancer drugs have been designed to slowly slowly show their effects on the cancerous cells and stop their progression by suppressing them via various molecular mechanisms.
Types of Anticancer Drugs: There are two types of anti-cancer drugs.
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Cell cycle specific (CCS) drugs: These drugs
exert their actions selectively on the cycling/proliferating cells, are
most effective in hematologic malignancies and in solid tumors in which a
relatively large proportion of the cells are proliferating.
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Cell
cycle non-specific (CCNS) drugs: These drugs can
kill tumor cells in both cycling and resting phases (although cycling
cells are more sensitive). These drugs used in slow growing tumors.
Classification:
- Antimetabolites: Structurally antimetabolites are related to normal compounds that are found within the cell. Generally they interfere in the availability of precursors of normal purine or pyrimidine nucleotide, either by blocking their synthesis or by competing with them in DNA or RNA synthesis.
Pharmacokinetics: Antimetabolites is variably absorbed at low doses from the GI track, but it can also be administered by intramuscular, intravenous and intrathecal routes because MTX does not easily penetrate the blood brain barrier. It also distribute to the skin, excretion of parent and 7-OH metabolite occur primarily via urine.
Clinical Use: It is used to treat leukemia and certain types of cancer of the breast, skin, head and neck, lung, or uterus. Methotrexate is also helpful to treat the severe psoriasis and rheumatoid arthritis in adults.
Adverse Effect: Stomatitis, rash, alopecia, myelosuppression.
High-dose: renal damage and neurological toxicity.
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Antibiotics: Antitumor
antibiotics own their cytotoxic action primarily to their interaction with
DNA, leading to disruption of DNA function.
1.
Doxorubicin and
Daunorubicin: Doxorubicin and Daunorubicin are classified as anthracycline
antibiotics. Doxorubicin is the hydroxylated derivative of daunorubicin.
Mechanism of Action: Doxorubicin forms
complexes with DNA trough G bases in both of the DNA strands and prevents the
topoisomerase II activity consequent in cell cycle disruption and cell death,
it relaxes DNA super coils by nicking to facilitate DNA replication/ during RNA
transcription.
Pharmacokinetics: These agents must be administered intravenously, because they are inactivated in the GIT. The anthracycline antibiotics binds to plasma protein as well as to other tissues components, where they are distributed. It is mainly eliminated via biliary excretion.
Clinical Use: Doxorubicin sold under the brand name Adriamycin among others, is a chemotherapy medication used to treat cancer. This includes breast cancer, acute lymphocytic leukemia, bladder cancer and Kaposi's sarcoma, etc. Sometime it is used along with other chemotherapy agents.
Adverse Effect: Irreversible, dose-dependent cardiotoxicity is the more serious adverse reaction. Cardiotoxicity apparently results from the generation of the free radicals and lipid peroxidation.
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Alkylating Agents:
These agents exert their cytotoxic effects by covalently binding
to nucleophilic groups which are present on various cell constituents.
Alkylation of DNA can be the crucial cytotoxic reaction that is harmful to the
tumor.
Mechanism of Action: Ifosfamide is first
metabolized to hydroxylated intermediates primarily in the liver via CYP 450 system.
After that hydroxylated intermediates again metabolized to form the some
other active compounds, phosphoramide mustard and acrolein. The reaction
of phosphoramide mustard with the DNA would be the cytotoxic
action.
Pharmacokinetics: Ifosfamide is only available in IV form and basically metabolized by CYP450 3A4 and 2B6 iso-enzymes and excreted via renal route.
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Microtubules Inhibitors:
The mitotic spindles
is component of larger, intercellular skeleton (cytoskeleton) that is necessary
for the movements of structure that are found in the cytoplasm of
eukaryotic cells.
- Vincristine and vinblastine: Vincristine and vinblastine are structurally related to each
other and derived from the periwinkle plant.
Mechanism of Action: These drug bind to
tubulin and inhibit its polymerization into microtubules, preventing spindle
formation in dividing cells and causing arrest at metaphase. This effect become
manifest only during mitosis.
Pharmacokinetics: When these agents are administered via IV injection are responsible for rapid cytotoxic effects and cellular destruction. This is turn, can cause hyperuricemia due to the oxidation of purines that are related from fragmenting DNA molecules. It metabolized through liver.
Clinical Use: It is used to treat various types of cancer. In order to slow or stop the growth of cancer cells growth these cancer chemotherapy agents are usually given with other chemotherapy agents.
Adverse Effect: Neurotoxicity, constipation, Myelosuppression and peripheral neuropathy etc.
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Steroid Hormones:
Tumors that are steroidal hormones sensitive may be either hormone
responsive or hormone dependent.
- Tamoxifen:
Mechanism of Action: Tamoxifen competes
with endogenous estrogen for the estrogen receptors and therefore blocking the
proliferation actions of estrogen on mammary epithelium.
Pharmacokinetics: After oral administration tamoxifen is effective. It is metabolized partially via the liver. Some of the metabolites have estrogen antagonist activity while other have agonist activity. Unchanged drug metabolism and excretion occur through bile into feces.
Clinical Use: Tamoxifen is used to treat breast cancer. It is also helpful to decrease the risks of breast cancer in high-risk patients. This medication can block the growth of breast cancer. It acts to distrupt the effects of estrogen in the breast tissue.
Adverse Effect: Hot flashes, vomiting, nausea, skin rash, vaginal bleeding, endometrial cancer, effects on vision and thromboembolism.
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Topoisomerase Inhibitors:
These agents exert their mechanism of action via inhibition of
topoisomerase enzyme.
1.
Camptothecins: Camptothecins
are the plant alkaloids, the are originally isolated from Chinese tree
camptotheca.
Mechanism of Action: These drugs are
targeted on S-phase and inhibit the activity of topoisomerase I, which is
necessary for the DNA replication in the human cells.
Clinical Use: Other important clinical applications of camptothecin derivatives are to use as radiation sensitizers or as antiviral agents. The successful development of camptothecins as antitumor agents shows the importance of topoisomerase I as a target for cancer chemotherapy.
Adverse Effect: Bone marrow suppression, Neutropenia, Myelosuppression and acute or delayed diarrhea.
Radiotherapy and
Chemotherapy Treatment: In
radiation therapy waves of energy like light or heat, are used to treat cancers
and tumor. Chemotherapy is given as infusion mostly but some chemotherapy pills
and capsules also given.
Mechanism of
Radiotherapy: These waves break the DNA of cancer cells in such a way that, they
disturb their growth and division. In this way, radiation can kill cancer
cells, preventing and slowing the spread of the disease.
Mechanism of Chemotherapy: These
drugs kill the over growing cells because most of our cells not grown after
puberty and there over growth is stopped by chemotherapy agents.
Common Side Effects: Fatigue,
Hair loss, Diarrhea, Skin changes, Nausea and vomiting etc.

