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Pharmacokinetics and principles of action of Chemotherapeutic drugs 1. Outline the major classes of anti-cancer drugs. 2. Describe, using examples, the mode of action of the major classes of anticancer drugs: antimetabolites, intercalating agents, antimitotics etc Antimetabolites: These function at the level of DNA synthesis, interfering with the metabolism of compounds necessary for DNA, RNA or protein synthesis (specifically nucleic acid bases cytosine, thymine, adenine, guanine) & preventing their incorporation into newly formed DNA material. Two types of drug are available: 1. Chemical modification of a nucleic acid so that the drug rather then the true nucleic acid is incorporated into the DNA, preventing accurate replication. E.g. 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and its prodrugs capecitabine, gemcitabine, cytosine arabinoside, fludarabine. 2. Inhibits production of folic acid from its inactive dihydrofolate form to the active tetrahydrofolate (this is essential for transfer of methyl groups in DNA synthesis). E.g. methotraxate. They are cell-cycle specific (operating in the G1 – S phase), hence their toxicity reflects effects on cells that proliferate quickly - bone marrow and GI mucosa. Alkylating Agents: These are NOT cell cycle-specific, and directly interfere with the DNA double strand base pairs by chemically reacting with their structure, forming methyl cross-bridges. These then prevent the two DNA strands coming apart in mitosis to form daughter DNA fragments and division therefore fails. They are chemically diverse, and generate highly reactive, positively charged intermediates, which combine with an electron-rich nucleophilic group such as an amino acid, phosphate, or hydroxyl. E.g. cyclophosphamide, chlorambucil, melphalan. Bifunctional alkylating agents from covalent bonds between two different bases, resulting in interstrand and intrastrand crosslinks, whilst monofunctional alkylating agents cannot form cross-links but cause adducts Intercalating Agents (also called Cytotoxics or Synthetics): Specific to the S-phase of the cell-cycle. These act in a similar way to the alkylating agents but rather than directly forming cross-strands in the DNA molecule they bind between the base pair molecules: i.e. binding adenine to thymine, and cytosine to guanine, again preventing DNA double strand from dividing. E.g. Platinum compounds (cisplatin, oxaliplatin, carboplatin) act by binding specifically to guanosine, forming DNA adducts that crosslink either within one DNA strand or across strands. Other compounds active through DNA intercalation are the anthrax-cycline group of drugs (adriamycin, epirubicin, doxorubicin). Antimitotics (also called Spindle Poisons or Natural Products): Specific to the M-phase of the cell-cycle. These act by preventing spindle formation, which is essential in the sorting and moving of chromosomes following replication at the end of mitosis. The drugs in the group are vinca alkaloids: vincristine, vinblastine, vindesine. They have large volumes of distribution, indicating a high degree of tissue binding, and are eliminated mainly by hepatic metabolism and biliary excretion. Vincristine is the mainstay of treatment for childhood leukemia. Microtubule formation is also affected by podophyllin and the taxane group of drugs ( paclitaxel, docetaxel), which are cytotoxic through promoting the polymerization of tubulin, the building block of the microtubule. Topoisomerase Inhibitors: Specific to the S-phase of the cell-cycle. Topoisomerase enzymes prevent DNA strands from becoming tangled, by cutting DNA and allowing it to wind or unwind. The inhibitors bind to and stabilise the DNA/topoisomerase cleavable complex, thus preventing the relegation of DNA strands. Irreversible damage results when an advancing DNA replication fork encounters the drug-stabilised cleavable complex, ultimately leading to lethal double-stranded breaks. Hormone Antagonists: G2-phase specific & cytostatic in nature - hormone receptor antagonists bind to the normal receptor for a given hormone and prevent its activation. The target recepetor may be on the cell surface, as in the case of peptide and glycoprotein hormones, or it may be intracellular, as in the case of steroid hormone receptors. E.g. Selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERM's) - act as antagonists of the estrogen receptor and are used primarily for the treatment and chemoprevention of breast cancer (tamoxifen) Because of these modes of action, certain drugs require cells to be in specific phases of the cell cycle to have any effect. Cytotoxic drugs are therefore further classified into: - phase-specific drugs: acting only in a specific phase of the cell cycle (e.g. antimetabolites during S-phase and vinca alkaloids in M-phase) - cycle-specific drugs: requiring that cells be actively dividing and passing through the cell cycle rather than being in the resting G0 phase – e.g. the alkylating agents. ** Refer to Wk15 Blackboard Electronic Resources for a reading titled ‘Cancer Chemotherapy’. Page 6-8 provide good summaries of these classes (which I have not used in this info). These list factors such as drug administration, side effects, drug interactions, resistance, and cancer types. 3. Outline differences between anticancer treatments and ‘typical’ drug therapy. Anticancer treatments are intended to be toxic to the cancer cells, but innocuous to the host. Their action is based in differences between the biochemistry (particularly DNA) of the cancer cells and the host. Cancer treatments such as chemotherapy cause a proportional reduction of affected cells, rather than complete destruction, leading to the requirement for cycles of treatment. This process is depicted below, starting with surgical removal of the tumor mass. To be continued… 4. Describe the log cell kill hypothesis as it applies to the use of cytotoxic drugs. The Cell Kill Hypothesis proposes that actions of cancer drugs follow first order kinetics: a given dose kills a constant proportion of a tumor cell population (rather than a constant number of cells). Most applicable to the use of cancer drugs to treat acute leukemia’s and aggressive highgrade lymphomas. The growth rate is not constant (e.g., it slows as a tumor increases in size) growth rates also vary significantly among tumor types. Tumor cell burden and the population kinetics of the cancer cells are important determinants of the success of chemotherapy, and directly determine the dosing schedule. The magnitude of a tumor cell kill is a logarithmic function i.e., a 3-log-kill dose of an effective drug will reduce the cancer cell load from 1012 cells to 109, or from 106 to 103 The example shows the effects of tumor burden, scheduling, dosing, and 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, and dies at 1012 cells. 3 treatment options are shown: DARK BLUE LINE: Infrequent scheduling of treatment courses with low (1 log kill) dosing and a late start prolongs survival but does not cure the patient (i.e., kill rate < growth rate) LIGHT BLUE LINE: More intensive and frequent treatment, with adequate (2 log kill) dosing and an earlier start is successful (i.e., kill rate > growth rate) GREEN LINE: Early surgical removal of the primary tumour decreases the tumour burden. Chemotherapy will remove persistent secondary tumours, and the total duration of therapy does not have to be as long as when chemotherapy alone is used. See also this link for a relevant section on a paper from the Journal of Anticancer Chemotherapy: http://books.google.com.au/books?id=BNIBPy88u_sC&pg=PA1007&lpg=PA1007&dq= log+cell+kill+hypothesis+cytotoxic&source=bl&ots=AU_N_sqa6j&sig=xCElMplgwKr NXTBxT8gLWe5EFSw&hl=en&ei=9RIaSp2_BtWSkAXCpmg&sa=X&oi=book_result &ct=result&resnum=2