Title: Pharmacology of Chemotherapy
1Pharmacology of Chemotherapy
- David W. Hedley MD
- Dept Medical Oncology and Hematology
- Division of Applied Molecular Oncology
2Chemotherapy
- Cytotoxic agents- generally given by intravenous
injection or orally - Most chemotherapy drugs act by damaging DNA or
inhibiting DNA synthesis - Important exceptions are drugs that target
microtubules
3Evolution of Chemotherapy
- 1940s first use of successful use alkylating
agent nitrogen mustard to treat human cancer - 1950-1960s major alkylating agents and
anti-metabolites currently in use synthesized.
Effective against wide range of cancer types,
particularly rapidly growing leukemias and
lymphomas. Scientific principles of cancer
chemotherapy developed.
4The Science of Chemotherapy
- Many early concepts derived from radiation
biology- clonogenic survival- fractional cell
kill- need to eliminate all clonogenic cells to
achieve cure- normal host effects
5The Science of ChemotherapyL1210 Mouse
LymphomaHoward Skippers work (1960s)
- Rapidly growing tumours
- Initially used animal survival to infer cancer
cell killing in vivo - Based on relation between number of cells
inoculated and survival
6The Science of Chemotherapy
- Fractional cell kill of L1210 lymphoma inoculated
at 1x106 in vivo - Single treatment with chemotherapy drug
- Effect on lifespan with increasing log cell kill
- Even though you get a lot of cancer cell,
difficult to achieve cure!
7Clinical Implications of Fractional Cell Kill
8The Science of Chemotherapy- Bob Bruce Data
Showing Cell Cycle Dependence of Killing by
g-Radiation, Nitrogen Mustard, and Tritiated
Thymidine in Lymphoma vs. Normal Bone Marrow in
vivo (JNCI 196637233-245)
9Ian Tannocks PhD ProjectUsing tritiated
thymidine autoradiography, showed solid tumours
proliferate more slowly further away from blood
vessels. Cause of drug resistance
The Science of Chemotherapy
10Evolution of Chemotherapy
- 1970s - Golden Age of medical
oncology.Development of effective combination
chemotherapy regimens.New classes of drug
developed- anthracyclines, platinum compounds
Cures achieved in some forms of cancer
(lymphomas, leukemias, testis cancer).Significant
responses in some common types of cancer
(breast, stomach, small cell lung
cancer)Effective use of chemotherapy to prevent
recurrence in high risk breast cancer patients.
11Evolution of Chemotherapy
- 1980s disillusion sets in.
- Development of increasingly complex, toxic (and
expensive) treatment protocols - Some improvement in response rates, but hope
fades for curing common forms of cancer - Intensive search for analogues of existing drugs,
hoping for greater anticancer effect or less
toxicity - Introduction of remaining major types of
chemotherapy (taxanes, topoisomerase I
inhibitors)
12Evolution of Chemotherapy
- 1990s still hard going in the clinic, but ..
- Post-operative adjuvant chemotherapy established
to reduce mortality in some major causes of
cancer death (breast, colon cancer) - Biochemical basis of drug resistance established
- Idea that development of cancers involves
suppression of cell death pathways, and that drug
resistance results from failure of damaged cells
to undergo apoptosis- e.g. bcl2, p53 stories
13Evolution of Chemotherapy
- 2000s rapid development of molecular targeted
agents as alternatives to classical chemotherapy - Evolution of molecular oncology and rational
cancer therapeutics - integrating basic science,
pharmacology, pathology, and clinical oncology
14Classification of Chemotherapy(difficult to do
many drugs first identified by empirical
screening for anticancer effect, rather than
rational synthesis)
- DNA damaging agents- alkylating agents-
platinum compounds - Antimetabolites
- Topoisomerase inhibitors
- Anti-mitotic agents
15Nitrogen Mustard
- First chemotherapy agent used in man
- Prototype alkylating agent
- Main toxicity comes from DNA cross linkage
16DNA Cross Linkage
- Arrests DNA replication
- Can result in DNA damage and chromosome breaks
- Also mutagenic!
17Chlorambucil
- Derivative of nitrogen mustard
- Much less reactive
- Well absorbed by mouth
- Remains major drug for treating low grade
lymphomas
18Cyclophosphamide
- More complex activation than nitrogen mustards
requires cytochrome p450 in liver - Can be given orally or intravenously
- Main side effects are bone marrow suppression
19Other DNA Damaging Agents
- Platinum compounds- prototype cisplatin- main
effect interstrand cross links- many analogues
produced with broader spectrum - Nitrosoureas- transfer chloroethyl group to
guanine at O6 position
20Antimetabolite Drugs
- Designed to block DNA synthesisBased on idea
that cancer cells divide more rapidly than normal
cells, so more vulnerable - Originally considered to be cytostatic rather
than cytotoxic, but now recognized that many
produce cell death by triggering apoptosis - Unlike most conventional chemotherapy drugs,
development by rational synthesis rather than
empirical screening for anticancer effects - Most are either nucleoside analogues that
interfere with DNA synthesis, or block
methylation of uracil to thymidylate
21Antimetabolite Basics
22Nucleoside Analogues- biochemical pharmacology
mirrors the uptake and metabolism of normal
nucleosides
23Cytosine arabinoside (cytarabine Ara-C)- major
chemotherapy drug to treat acute leukemias
24- Ara-CTP competes with dCTP
- inhibits DNA polymerases
- incorporation into DNA produces strand breaks
- triggers apoptosis
25Ara-C in treatment of acute leukemia
- High doses to overcome transport resistance
- Because ara-C targets cells in S-phase, given
over 5-7 days to account for slow cycling
populations of leukemia cells - Major toxicity is suppression of blood counts
26Inhibition of Thymidylate Synthesis
- Pyrimidine base 5-Fluorouracil (5FU) inhibits
thymidylate synthase - Methotrexate inhibits dihydrofolate reductase,
reducing flow of methyl group carried by reduced
folate
27Effects of TS Inhibition
- Decrease in dTTP associated with build up of dUTP
- Mis-incorporation of dUTP into DNA
- This is removed by DNA repair pathways
- However, DNA repair synthesis also
mis-incorporates dUTP futile repair cycle
results in extensive DNA damage - 5-fluorouracil and methotrexate both clinically
important drugs
28Natural Products
- Discovered by empirically screening compounds for
anticancer effects in vitro (similar to
antibiotic discovery) - Mechanisms of action subsequently identified
- Important compounds showing effect in lymphoma
(and other cancers) are- topoisomerase
inhibitors- microtubule inhibitors
29Topoisomerase II Inhibitors
- Topoisomerase II allows replicated DNA strands to
separate by making breaks, then re-ligating - Main class of topo II inhibitors are the
anthracyclines, originally from Streptomyces - Intercalate into DNA and prevent re-ligation step
- Daunorubicin is the classical anthracycline used
to treat acute leukemia
30Daunorubicin toxicity
- Bone marrow suppression is most important early
toxicity - Also causes gastro-intestinal toxicity- nausea,
vomiting, diarrhea - Hepatobiliary excretion is major route for drug
elimination toxicity greater in presence of
jaundice - Cardiac toxicity is most important late effect-
risk increases with accumulated dose- can result
in fatal cardiac failure
31Mechanism of Anthracycline Cardiac Toxicity
- As well as intercalating into DNA, daunorubicin
avidly binds mitochondrial inner membrane of
cardiac muscle - Daunorubicin chelates iron, which catalyzes
formation of the free radical semiquinone - Redox cycling transfers high energy electron to
oxygen, generating oxygen free radicals - Produce lipid peroxidation damage to
mitochondrial membranes
32Microtubule Inhibitors
- Vinca alkaloids (from periwinkle plant)-
destabilize microtubules- vincristine commonly
used to treat acute lymphoblastic leukemias - Taxanes (from Pacific yew tree bark)- stabilize
microtubules- taxotere most active in current
use - Main effect of these drugs is to cause metaphase
arrest and chromosomal damage- probably have
additional effects due to microtubule disruption
in interphase cells
33Effects of Vincristine on T-cell Leukemia Cell
Line
34Chemical Structure of TaxolMany natural products
are very complex organic molecules. Complexity
can make them useful starting points for drug
development
35Why Dont We Cure Cancer With Chemotherapy?
- Toxic side effects limit dose
- Cancer cells show drug resistance- innate drug
resistance, or acquired resistance during
treatment
36Toxic Effects of Chemotherapy
- Generic side effects are damage to rapidly
dividing normal cells- bone marrow, gut mucosa,
hair follicles - Nausea due to triggering CNS vomiting centres
- Drug-specific side effects- myocardium
(anthracylines)- kidney (platinum)- nervous
system (microtubule agents) - Toxicity increases with dose of drug used
37Combination Chemotherapy
- Drugs selected for combinations based on-
differences in side effects allows each to be
used at full dose- different mechanisms of
action cancer less likely to be cross-resistant - Prototype curative combination is MOPP (nitrogen
mustard, vincristine (Oncovin), procarbazine and
prednisone (glucocorticoid steroid) - 1970 - Typically given as outpatient every 3-4 weeks, to
allow recovery of normal tissue side effects
38How Far Can You Push Chemotherapy?
- Generally, the more you give the greater the
anticancer effect - Bone marrow suppression is main lethal side
effect of chemotherapy - Bone marrow transplantation (either patients or
normal donor) bypasses this dose-limiting
toxicity, allows more chemo. Can be curative in
some situations, including acute leukemia - Although higher response rates, other side
effects may prevent curative doses from being
achieved
39Drug Resistance
- Main factor determining if a cancer will be cured
with chemotherapy - Complex and multifactorial, but main causes of
drug resistance are probably now understood
40Development of Drug Resistance in a Leukemia
Patient
- Antique chart (from my residency days!) of newly
diagnosed AML patient treated with ara-C plus
daunorubicin, followed by ara-C plus
6-thioguanine maintenance chemotherapy - represents circulating leukemic
blasts - Shows initial clearance of leukemia with
treatment, and reappearance of normal
granulocytes and platelets
41Development of Drug Resistance in a Leukemia
Patient
- Blood counts remaining fairly normal during
maintenance chemotherapy
42Development of Drug Resistance in a Leukemia
Patient
- Eventually leukemic blasts reappear in
circulation - Initially respond to intensified chemotherapy
- Then rapid accumulation of drug resistant
population
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44- High dose Ara-C can overcome transport resistance
because transporter is non-saturable - Activity of deoxycytidine kinase can be increased
by inhibiting endogenous deoxycytidine using
ribonucleotide reductase inhibitors- but these
can also enhance normal tissue toxicity
45Overcoming Drug Resistance
- Some cellular mechanisms of multidrug resistance
(P-glycoprotein-mediated drug efflux, glutathione
conjugation) can be reversed pharmacologically - Able to enhance anticancer effects in model
systems - Results in clinical trials disappointing-
probably because of multifactorial nature of drug
resistance
46P-glycoprotein
- First multidrug resistance mechanism to be
characterized (Vic Ling, OCI, 1975) - P-glycoprotein is transmembrane ATP-dependent
efflux pump - Actively transports many types of chemotherapy
from cells (anthracyclines, vinca alkaloids,
taxanes) - Overexpression in cancers causes drug resistance
- P-glycoprotein inhibitors tested in clinical
trials
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48P-glycoprotein in Acute Leukemia
- P-glycoprotein overexpressed in some AML patients
- Higher levels associated with drug resistance and
worse prognosis - But clinical trials of P-glycoprotein inhibitors
fail to show significant improvement in
chemotherapy response- other resistance
mechanisms also operating- high Pgp levels might
be linked to aggressive biology, rather than
directly to drug resistance
49Targeting Cell Survival Pathways
- Recent evidence that failure of DNA damaged cells
to undergo apoptosis is major cause of multidrug
resistance - Suppression of apoptosis often occurs due to
oncogenic mutations i.e. common feature of
cancers - Potential to reverse this mechanism by molecular
therapies e.g. p53 gene therapy or small
molecule inhibitors of PI3-kinase pathway
50Where is Chemotherapy Going?
- Incremental improvements in patient outcome
continue, using newer drugs and combinations - Unlikely that this will result in major
improvements in cure rates for common forms of
cancer - Over past 2-3 years drug development programs
refocused on molecular targeted therapeutics - Potential for major advances based on new biology
- Molecular oncology revolution will need close
interactions between clinical oncology,
pathology, pharmacology, and basic science