Title: Plants Used In Cancer Treatment
1Plants Used In Cancer Treatment
2Mayapple - Podophyllum peltatum
- Perennial plant in the barberry family
(Berberidaceae) - Description
- Distribution
- Well known poisonous plant
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5Traditional uses of mayapple
- Rhizomes dried and ground to a powder
- Powerful purgative
- Also used as a poultice to treat warts and
tumorous growths on the skin
6Use in cancer chemotherapy
- Resin from mayapple rhizomes used in cream to
treat cancerous tumors, polyps and granulations
in traditional medicine - Podophyllin (resin from rhizome) was used by
physicians in Missouri, Mississippi, and
Louisiana by 1897 for treatment of genital warts
7Active Compounds in Rhizome
- Podophyllum peltatum rhizome contains high
concentrations of anticancer lignans and other
cmpds (16 in all) - podophyllotoxin
- a and b peltatin
- Another species - Podophyllum emodii
- podophyllotoxin
- a and b peltatin
- berberine an alkaloid which can be used to
treat fevers (including malaria) and as an
antibiotic
8Active compound in mayapple
- In the plant podophyllotoxin exists as a
glycoside - Active part is the aglycone
9Mode of action of podophyllotoxin
- Podophyllotoxin acts as a cell poison for cells
undergoing mitosis - Too toxic for chemotherapy use
- Used in creams as treatment for genital warts
- Genital warts caused by HPV (human
papillomavirus) associated with cancers of the
genitals (squamous cell carcinomas)
10Side effects of podophyllotoxin
- Adverse reactions to topical applications include
burning, inflammation - When the drug was being investigated as a
chemotherapy agent, it caused nausea, vomiting,
fever, mouth ulcers, diarrhea, nervous system
problems, seizures, kidney damage, etc.
11Semi-synthetic derivatives
- Etoposide and teniposide are derivatives of
phyllotoxin that are much less toxic and are
safely used in chemotherapy - Etoposide is much more widely used
- Both compounds block the cell cycle in at least
two specific places - Today these are produced from the Podophyllum
emodii from SE Asia but supply is dwindling and
USDA scientists are trying to develop mayapple
12Semi-synthetic derivatives of podophyllotoxin
teniposide
13Etoposide
- Marketed as VePesid or VP-16
- Administered intravenously or orally as liquid
capsules - Widely used to treat various types of cancer
- Testicular cancer which hasn't responded to other
treatment - First-line treatment for small-cell lung cancers
- Used for chorionic carcinomas, Kaposi's sarcoma,
lymphomas and malignant melanomas
14Side effects of etoposide
- Major side effects include hair loss, nausea,
anorexia, diarrhea, and low leukocyte and
platelet counts - Some people have severe allergic reactions to the
drug - Can cause genetic damage and may increase a
patient's risk of developing leukemia - Causes fetal damage and birth defects
15Mode of action of etoposide
- Blocks cell division possibly by two or more
different actions - At high concentrations etoposide causes lysis of
cells entering mitosis - At low concentrations cells are inhibited from
entering prophase - It does not interfere with microtubule assembly,
surprisingly since podophyllotoxin does - Antimitotic by inhibiting DNA synthesis
16Inhibition of DNA synthesis
- Acts by inhibition of DNA topoisomerase II
- DNA topoisomerase enzymes catalyse the transient
breaking and rejoining of DNA strands - The type I cleaves only one of two stands
- Type II cleaves both strands at the same time,
allowing one DNA duplex to pass through another
17Pacific Yew Trees and Taxol
18Taxus yew Conifer in the family Taxaceae
Aril
19Poisonous plants
- Arils are the only part of the plant that is not
poisonous - All other parts (especially leaves and seeds)
contain taxine alkaloids that are deadly to
humans or other animals. - Alkaloid is a nervous system depressant that
causes the heart rate to slow or stop - often
remarkably quick - death often in minutes. Horses
or cattle die within 5 minutes are ingesting - Nevertheless, widely used in traditional medicine
(and as poisons)
20Yews
- Widely used as ornamentals - the commonly planted
yew is the English yew - Taxus baccata - The source of taxol is the Pacific yew - Taxus
brevifolia - Occurs in old growth forests in British Columbia,
Alaska, California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and
Washington - Many populations are in serious decline
21Development of Taxol
- Taxol (paclitaxel) is produced from the bark of
Taxus brevifolia - Taxol is probably the most significant drug
developed through the NCI-USDA program - Bark extract only showed moderate activity in the
early screening program against mouse leukemia so
only slight interest initially - 1963-1971 Wall and Wani at RTI - Paclitaxel was
first chemically isolated in 1969 and structure
determined in 1971 a diterpene but complex
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23Interest increases
- In mid to late 70s - paclitaxel shown effect
against several human tumor lines - Susan Horowitz at Albert Einstein College of
Medicine - paclitaxel had a unique mode of action - Binds to microtubules and inhibits their
depolymerization into tubulin - This blocks a cell's ability to break down the
spindle during mitosis - With the spindle still in place the cell can't
divide into daughter cells - opposite vinca
alkaloids
24Phase I trials - 1983
- Almost ended testing on Taxol
- Serious problems of toxicity and strong allergic
reactions including anaphalaxis - Toxicity traced back to poor solubility of
paclitaxel in aqueous systems - This required use of an emulsifying agent called
Cremophore EL (castor oil derivative) - Cremophore EL is known to cause hypersensitivity
- Problems alleviated by longer infusion times and
also by premedication with corticosteroids and
antihistamines
25Problems
- Slow progress in Phase I trials
- Supply became more of an issue when Phase II
trials showed activity against ovarian cancer in
1987 - 30 positive response in refractory cases - This greatly increased the demand for bark
26Bark supply
- Yield of Taxol was about 0.5 gram per 30 pounds
of bark - Average Pacific yew tree that was 100 yrs old
yielded 20 lb of bark (3 trees/g) - Usual treatment 2 g/patient (6 trees)
- 12,000 women dying yearly from ovarian cancer -
24,000 g of taxol - 72,000 trees - Meanwhile significant activity shown in
metastatic breast cancer - 40,000 deaths per year
27Supply remains a problem
- Concern there was not enough trees to treat
patients - Survey by Forest Service and Bureau of Land
Management (funded by Bristol-Myers Squibb) found
gt100 million trees - Over 1.6 million pounds of bark harvested in 1991
and again in 1992 - Need for alternative sources soon realized
28New Sources Identified
- Other species of Taxus contain taxol even in
needles - Although yield much lower it is a renewable
resource - Tissue cultures of bark cells promising
- Semi-synthesis in the laboratory from precursors
in needles - Fungal pathogen on yews also synthesizes taxol
29Taxus baccata - English yew
- French scientists found a semi-synthetic method
of developing taxol from a molecule in needles of
Taxus baccata - Also led to the development of a second
anti-cancer compound - docetaxel (Taxotere) - In 1992 Holton, FSU scientist, found an easier
semi-synthesis method this became the method
for commercial development of Taxol - Dec 1993 Holton achieved total synthesis
30Paclitaxel approval
- Paclitaxel is a complex diterpene marketed by
Bristol Myers Squibb as Taxol - Approved by FDA in 1992 for ovarian cancer and in
1994 for breast cancer - first unmodified
secondary plant product approved by FDA in 30 yrs - Since then approved for other forms of cancer
- 167 clinical trials for Taxol
31Taxol Side Effects
- Administered by IV because it irritates skin and
mucous membranes on contact - Allergic reactions as mentioned
- Other side effects
- abnormally low neutrophil, which can leave the
patient vulnerable to infection - abnormally low platelet counts, which can cause
hard-to-control bleeding - anemia and bone and muscle pain
32Docetaxel - a derivative
- Marketed as Taxotere by Rhone-Poulenc Rorer
- Initially approved by FDA in 1996 for localized
breast cancer and in 1998 for metastatic breast
cancer - Like paclitaxel, it prevents the mitotic spindle
from being broken down but mode of action is
slightly different - stabilizes microtubule
bundles - Clinical trials indicate it may be about twice as
effective as paclitaxel - Also tested on carcinomas of the bladder, cervix,
lung, and ovaries on malignant melanoma and on
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
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34Side effects of Taxotere
- Also given intravenously
- Allergic reactions
- Skin rashes
- Edema
- Abnormally low neutrophil counts
- Peripheral nervous system disorders
35Dozens of New Derivatives
- Whole family of taxol derivatives (taxanes)
produced by Holton and other FSU scientists - MAC-321
- Phase I and II clinical studies are on-going for
colorectal, metastatic breast, and non-small cell
lung cancer - Excitement because oral administration possible