| Literature DB >> 27164115 |
Panagiota Papanagnou1, Theodora Stivarou2, Maria Tsironi3.
Abstract
The development of efficacious antitumor compounds with minimal toxicity is a hot research topic. Numerous cancer cell targeted agents are evaluated daily in laboratories for their antitumorigenicity at the pre-clinical level, but the process of their introduction into the market is costly and time-consuming. More importantly, even if these new antitumor agents manage to gain approval, clinicians have no former experience with them. Accruing evidence supports the idea that several medications already used to treat pathologies other than cancer display pleiotropic effects, exhibiting multi-level anti-cancer activity and chemosensitizing properties. This review aims to present the anticancer properties of marketed drugs (i.e., metformin and pioglitazone) used for the management of diabetes mellitus (DM) type II. Mode of action, pre-clinical in vitro and in vivo or clinical data as well as clinical applicability are discussed here. Given the precious multi-year clinical experience with these non-antineoplastic drugs their repurposing in oncology is a challenging alternative that would aid towards the development of therapeutic schemes with less toxicity than those of conventional chemotherapeutic agents. More importantly, harnessing the antitumor function of these agents would save precious time from bench to bedside to aid the fight in the arena of cancer.Entities:
Keywords: anti-diabetic agents; applicability; drug repurposing; tumorigenesis
Year: 2016 PMID: 27164115 PMCID: PMC4932542 DOI: 10.3390/ph9020024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1Models that have been proposed to explain the inhibition of tumor cell proliferation by metformin. (A) metformin prevents tumor cell proliferation in a cell non-autonomous fashion through blocking the insulin/insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) signaling axis. (B) Metformin-induced blockage of tumor cell proliferation is cell autonomous and is mechanistically associated with the inhibition of complex I of the oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). (C) The substrate limitation model. According to this model, metformin acts in an AMPK-independent manner to block the usage of glucose and glutamine by oxidative reactions (Krebs cycle) in mitochondria (mt) of tumor cells. Besides, it promotes a shift towards reductive rather than oxidative α-ketoglutaric acid (α-KG) metabolism. The reductive carboxylation of glutamine-derived α-KG that takes place either in cytosol (mediated by isocitrate dehydrogenase 1, IDH1) or in mitochondria (mediated by IDH2) is being boosted by metformin. Although the presence of metformin favors the production of citrate the reductive carboxylation of α-ΚG, the hindrance of OXPHOS in mitochondria induced by the drug results in a decrease of total citrate derived from either mitochondrial or cytosolic reactions. The drop of lipogenic citrate leads in the prevention of tumor cell proliferation which requires de novo lipogenesis. The red “X” symbol denotes inhibition of a signaling pathway while upward and downward pointing arrows denote up- and downregulation, respectively.
Selected Active or Completed Clinical Trials on metformin and pioglitazone for cancer therapeutics or cancer prevention.
| Setting | Anti-diabetic Intervention | Other Intervention | Phase | Status | ClinicalTrials. Gov Identifier |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Metastatic or unresectable solid tumor or lymphoma | Metformin | Temsirolimus | I | Completed § | NCT00659568 |
| Li Fraumeni Syndrome | Metformin | - | I | Recruiting | NCT01981525 |
| Advanced cancers | Metformin | Temsirolimus | I | Recruiting | NCT01529593 |
| Hormone-resistant prostate cancer | Metformin | Enzalutamide/Laboratory biomarker analysis | I | Not yet recruiting | NCT02339168 |
| Locally advanced or metastatic prostate cancer | Metformin | - | II | Active, not recruiting | NCT01243385 |
| Breast cancer prevention in obese /overweight premenopausal women with metabolic syndrome | Metformin | Placebo | II | Recruiting | NCT02028221 |
| Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) | Metformin | Placebo/Stereotactic body Radiotherapy (SBRT) | II | Recruiting | NCT02285855 |
| Colorectal and breast cancer | Metformin | Exercise training/Exercise training plus metformin | II | Active, not recruiting | NCT01340300 |
| Bladder cancer | Metformin | Simvastatin | II | Not yet recruiting | NCT02360618 |
| Advanced stage ovarian, fallopian tube and primary peritoneal cancer | Metformin | Combination chemotherapy/Laboratory biomarker analysis | II | Recruiting | NCT02122185 |
| Locally advanced NSCLC | Metformin plus chemo-radiotherapy | Chemo-radiotherapy | II | Recruiting | NCT02115464 |
| Metastatic pancreatic cancer | Metformin | Modified FOLFOX 6/ Laboratory biomarker analysis | II | Recruiting | NCT01666730 |
| Hormone-dependent prostate cancer | Metformin | Aspirin/Placebo/ Laboratory biomarker analysis | II | Recruiting | NCT02420652 |
| Metastatic breast cancer | Metformin | Placebo | II | Recruiting | NCT01310231 |
| Castration resistant prostate cancer | Metformin | Enzalutamide | II | Not yet recruiting | NCT02640534 |
| Hormone receptor positive metastatic breast cancer in postmenopausal women | Metformin | Everolimus/Exemestane | II | Active, not recruiting | NCT01627067 |
| Locally advanced rectal cancer | Metformin | - | II | Recruiting | NCT02437656 |
| Breast cancer prevention | Metformin | Placebo | II | Recruiting | NCT02028221 |
| Prostate cancer | Metformin plus bicalutamide | Bicalutamide | II | Recruiting | NCT02614859 |
| Prostate cancer, Prostate cancer recurrent | Metformin | - | II | Recruiting | NCT02176161 |
| Ovarian, Fallopian tube, and Primary peritoneal cancer | Metformin | - | II | Recruiting | NCT01579812 |
| Refractory colorectal cancer | Metformin | Irinotecan | II | Not yet recruiting | NCT01930864 |
| Early stage breast cancer | Metformin | Placebo | III | Active, not recruiting | NCT01101438 |
| Prostate cancer | Metformin | Placebo | III | Recruiting | NCT01864096 |
| Advanced solid tumors | Pioglitazone | Carboplatin | I | Active, not recruiting | NCT02133625 |
| PAX8-PPARγ fusion gene-positive thyroid cancer | Pioglitazone | - | II | Recruiting | NCT01655719 |
| Pancreatic cancer | Pioglitazone | - | II | Recruiting | NCT01838317 |
| Oral leukoplakia | Pioglitazone | Placebo/Laboratory biomarker analysis | II | Completed§ | NCT00951379 |
| Lung cancer chemoprevention | Pioglitazone | Placebo/fluorescence bronchoscopy/quantitative high resolution computerized tomography (CT) scan | II | Active, not recruiting | NCT00780234 |
| Squamous cell cancer chemoprevention | Pioglitazone | - | II | Enrolling by invitation | NCT02347813 |
§ No results from these studies have been posted yet.
Figure 2Pathways associated with the sensitivity or resistance of tumor cells to metformin under normoglycemic or hyperglycemic conditions. (A) Under normoglycemic conditions metformin opposes the expression of MYC and tumor cells display sensitivity to metformin-induced killing. (B) Under hyperglycemic conditions metformin-induced prevention of MYC expression is abolished. MYC upregulates the expression of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 1 (PDK1), which in turn inhibits pyruvate dehydrogenase. Glycolytic flux is therefore increased and tumor cells display resistance to the toxic effects of metformin. The red “X” symbol denotes inhibition of a signaling pathway. Upward pointing arrow denotes upregulation.