| Literature DB >> 20623028 |
Abstract
Over the past two to three decades, gallium compounds have gained importance in the fields of medicine and electronics. In clinical medicine, radioactive gallium and stable gallium nitrate are used as diagnostic and therapeutic agents in cancer and disorders of calcium and bone metabolism. In addition, gallium compounds have displayed anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive activity in animal models of human disease while more recent studies have shown that gallium compounds may function as antimicrobial agents against certain pathogens. In a totally different realm, the chemical properties of gallium arsenide have led to its use in the semiconductor industry. Gallium compounds, whether used medically or in the electronics field, have toxicities. Patients receiving gallium nitrate for the treatment of various diseases may benefit from such therapy, but knowledge of the therapeutic index of this drug is necessary to avoid clinical toxicities. Animals exposed to gallium arsenide display toxicities in certain organ systems suggesting that environmental risks may exist for individuals exposed to this compound in the workplace. Although the arsenic moiety of gallium arsenide appears to be mainly responsible for its pulmonary toxicity, gallium may contribute to some of the detrimental effects in other organs. The use of older and newer gallium compounds in clinical medicine may be advanced by a better understanding of their mechanisms of action, drug resistance, pharmacology, and side-effects. This review will discuss the medical applications of gallium and its mechanisms of action, the newer gallium compounds and future directions for development, and the toxicities of gallium compounds in current use.Entities:
Keywords: Gallium; calcium and bone metabolism; cancer therapeutics; electronics; iron; iron proteins; semi-conductors; toxicities
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20623028 PMCID: PMC2898053 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph7052337
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Gallium Compounds in Clinical and Preclinical Development.
| Gallium Compounds | Tumors or diseases investigated/being investigated |
|---|---|
| First Generation–FDA-approved | |
| Gallium nitrate [ | Hypercalcemia, metabolic bone disease |
| Second generation–Preclinical and Phase 1 and 2 clinical trials | |
| Gallium maltolate [ | Hepatoma, lymphoma, microbial infections |
| G4544 [ | Metabolic bone disease, osteoporosis, skeletal metastases |
| Tris(8-quinolonato)Ga(III) KP46 [5;96;97] | Lung cancer, melanoma, other cancers |
| Third generation–Preclinical | |
| Gallium thiosemicarbazones [ | Various malignant cell lines, cryptococcus fungi |
| Gallium complexes with ligands of pyridine & 4–6-substituted phenolic moieties [ | Prostate cancer (rat model) |
| Organometallic gallium compounds [ | Various malignant cell lines |
Toxicities of Intratracheal Installation of Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) in Animals.
| Organ systems and animals | Outcome |
|---|---|
| Male Fischer-344 rats; single installation of 10, 30, or 100 mg/kg GaAs; analysis at 14 days [ | Weight loss; dose-dependent increase in lung weight; 14–42% of As and 23–42% of gallium dose retained in lung; arsenic, but not gallium detected in the blood; increased urinary excretion of porphyrins |
| Male Fischer-344 rats; single installation of 100 mg/kg GaAs; analysis at 14 days [ | Increased weight and dry lung weight with elevation of lung protein, DNA, and 4-hydroxyproline; pulmonary retention of GaAs particles with multifocal alveolitis, purulent pneumonia, Type II pneumocyte hyperplasia, necrosis, and mild fibrosis |
| Male Fischer-344 rats; single installation of smaller particle diameter “respirable” 100 mg/kg GaAs. Analysis on days 1, 3, 7, 14, and 28 [ | Loss of body weight, pneumocyte hyperplasia, proliferative pneumonia, interstitial pneumonia, perivascular cuffing, lymphoid hyperplasia, edema, fibrosis, hemorrhage, vascular congestion, and alveolar proteinosis |
| Male CD rats; single installation of 50, 100, or 200 mg/kg GaAs [ | Increased lung weight, and seropurulent pneumomia; increase in Type II pneumocytes and alveolar macrophases; interstitial pneumonia |
| Syrian golden hamsters; Installation of 0.5 mg GaAs per week for 15 weeks, 2 year observation [ | Reduced survival and pulmonary inflammation |
| Syrian Golden Hamsters; 7.6 mg/kg GaAs twice per week x 4 weeks. Evaluated at 8 and 16 weeks [ | Moderate inflammation with diffuse alveolar bronchiolar cell hyperplasia and infiltration with alveolar macrophages; mild interstitial fibrosis and cholesterol clefts |
| Syrian Golden hamsters; 7.7 mg/kg GaAs, twice a week for 14 installations [ | Sperm count reduced by 22%, 3-fold increase in spermatid retention and degeneration, increase in abnormal sperm |
| Male CD rats; single installation of 50, 100, or 200 mg/kg GaAs [ | Mitochondrial swelling in proximal tubules |
| Syrian Golden Hamsters [ | Atrophy and degenerative changes of convoluted tubules |
| Male CD rats; single intratracheal installation of 50, 100, or 200 mg/kg GaAs [ | Dose-dependent inhibition of blood delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (ALAD) in erythrocytes (by 3 days), and kidney (by 6 days), increased urinary ALA excretion by 6 days |
| B6C3F1 mice; single intratracheal dose of 50–200 mg/kg GaAs [ | Suppression of both humoral and cell-mediated immunity; inhibition of T-cell proliferation; altered CD25 expression; suppression of macrophage processing of antigens and IgM response |
Toxicities of Orally Administered Gallium Arsenide in Animals.
| Animals | Outcome |
|---|---|
| Male Fischer-344 rats | Dose-dependent recovery of gallium (70–99%) and arsenic (56–91%) in the feces. Arsenic, but not gallium, detected in the blood. Significant increase in urinary uroporphyrin excretion with highest dose. No pathologic changes in lungs, liver, spleen, kidney, or testes. |
| Male Wistar albino rats | Weight loss. Increased liver weight, increased serum gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase and serum aspartate aminotransferase activity, decreased hepatic malondialdhyde and glutathione content. |