| Literature DB >> 30233361 |
Gareth J Sanger1, Paul L R Andrews2.
Abstract
The origins of the major classes of current anti-emetics are examined. Serendipity is a recurrent theme in discovery of their anti-emetic properties and repurposing from one indication to another is a continuing trend. Notably, the discoveries have occurred against a background of company mergers and changing anti-emetic requirements. Major drug classes include: (i) Muscarinic receptor antagonists-originated from historical accounts of plant extracts containing atropine and hyoscine with development stimulated by the need to prevent sea-sickness among soldiers during beach landings; (ii) Histamine receptor antagonists-searching for replacements for the anti-malaria drug quinine, in short supply because of wartime shipping blockade, facilitated the discovery of histamine (H1) antagonists (e.g., dimenhydrinate), followed by serendipitous discovery of anti-emetic activity against motion sickness in a patient undergoing treatment for urticaria; (iii) Phenothiazines and dopamine receptor antagonists-investigations of their pharmacology as "sedatives" (e.g., chlorpromazine) implicated dopamine receptors in emesis, leading to development of selective dopamine (D2) receptor antagonists (e.g., domperidone with poor ability to penetrate the blood-brain barrier) as anti-emetics in chemotherapy and surgery; (iv) Metoclopramide and selective 5-hydroxytryptamine3(5-HT3) receptor antagonists-metoclopramide was initially assumed to act only via D2 receptor antagonism but subsequently its gastric motility stimulant effect (proposed to contribute to the anti-emetic action) was shown to be due to 5-hydroxytryptamine4 receptor agonism. Pre-clinical studies showed that anti-emetic efficacy against the newly-introduced, highly emetic, chemotherapeutic agent cisplatin was due to antagonism at 5-HT3 receptors. The latter led to identification of selective 5-HT3 receptor antagonists (e.g., granisetron), a major breakthrough in treatment of chemotherapy-induced emesis; (v) Neurokinin1receptor antagonists-antagonists of the actions of substance P were developed as analgesics but pre-clinical studies identified broad-spectrum anti-emetic effects; clinical studies showed particular efficacy in the delayed phase of chemotherapy-induced emesis. Finally, the repurposing of different drugs for treatment of nausea and vomiting is examined, particularly during palliative care, and also the challenges in identifying novel anti-emetic drugs, particularly for treatment of nausea as compared to vomiting. We consider the lessons from the past for the future and ask why there has not been a major breakthrough in the last 20 years.Entities:
Keywords: 5-hydroxytryptamine3 receptor antagonists; drug discovery; histamine H1 receptor antagonists; metoclopramide; muscarinic receptor antagonists; nausea and vomiting; neurokinin1 receptor antagonists; olanzapine
Year: 2018 PMID: 30233361 PMCID: PMC6131675 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2018.00913
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1A summary of the levels of defense employed to initially avoid and, if required, to detect and respond to toxins ingested with the food. AP, area postrema (also known as the “chemoreceptor trigger zone” for emesis, but see text for discussion); NTS, nucleus tractus solitarius; the site in the dorsal brainstem where inputs from the vagal afferents and the area postrema are integrated and from which outputs pass to other areas of the brainstem to coordinate the motor outputs for vomiting and from which information is relayed to “higher” brain regions to evoke the sensation of nausea. Figure adapted and modified from Andrews (1993).
Figure 2Diagram illustrating that nausea and vomiting can be evoked by stimuli ranging from toxins in the food where they may be viewed as an “appropriate” response helping to defend the animal, to diseases and therapeutic interventions where they are viewed as undesirable and are classified as “symptoms” or “side-effects.” Profile of the head from http://getdrawings.com/talking-head-silhouette.
Figure 3Major players in the pharmaceutical industry responsible for the development of the main anti-emetic drugs over the time course covered by this review. See text for details and references.
The major pharmaceutical companies involved in the discovery of anti-emetic drugs during the period covered by this review and a summary of their key contribution to the area.
| •Rapidly focussed on the therapeutic potential of the newly-discovered “antihistamines,” searching libraries of compounds originally synthesized for another use. The first antihistamine to treat anaphylaxis and allergic reactions was phenbenzamine, introduced into the clinic in 1942. |
| •Introduced the “antihistamine” dimenhydrinate (Dramamine), a combination of diphenhydramine and 8-chlorotheophylline (a mild stimulant and derivative of theophylline) as a counter measure against the drowsiness, somnolence, and sedation caused by H1 receptor antagonism within the brain. |
| •Developed the “antihistamine” cyclizine, in 1947, subsequently taken on the Apollo moon missions as a treatment for space sickness. |
| •Identified metoclopramide in the mid-1950s, during a programme aimed at improving the properties of procainamide, a cardiac anti-arrhythmic and local anesthetic drug derived from procaine. The drug had negligible local anesthetic or cardiac anti-arrhythmic activity but an ability to inhibit emesis in dogs evoked by multiple stimuli. Soon after, metoclopramide was also found to stimulate GI motility and reduce symptoms associated with various upper GI disorders. |
| •Among the antipsychotic compounds the company had developed in the mid-1950s, some were effective antagonists at the dopamine receptors in the chemoreceptor trigger zone, an area of brain outside the blood-brain barrier, involved in regulation of vomiting. Domperidone was identified in 1974 as an antagonist which did not cross the blood-brain barrier and hence, less likely to evoke the extrapyramidal side-effects. |
| •Synthesized MDL72222 from the chemical template of cocaine, the first selective 5-HT3 receptor antagonist, originally aimed at the treatment of migraine. A later compound (MDL73147 or dolasetron) was marketed for the control for chemo-radiotherapy-induced emesis. |
| •Identified the anti-emetic activity of the 5-HT3 receptor antagonists, developing its own molecule (BRL43694 or granisetron, launched by SmithKline Beecham for the control of chemoradiotherapy-induced emesis) and successfully filed a patent to cover the anti-emetic use of Glaxo's compound (GR38032F or ondansetron), originally designed for treatment of “a variety of disorders including migraine” before being specifically patented for treatment of depression, schizophrenia, anxiety, and cognitive disorders. |
| •Identified ondansetron for the treatment of migraine and a variety of CNS disorders. Subsequent marketing as an anti-emetic drug incurred royalty payments to Beecham/SmithKline Beecham who owned the patent covering the anti-emetic use of this drug. |
| •Identified the 5-HT3 receptor antagonist ICS 205-930 (tropisetron), originally for treatment of migraine, subsequently sponsoring research to characterize its anti-emetic activity and “re-purpose” for treatment of chemoradiotherapy-induced emesis. |
| •Aprepitant introduced in 2003, following initial characterization for treatment of depression and emesis and a long history of failure of other NK1 receptor antagonists to treat pain. |
| •Synthesized and characterized palonosetron (RS 25259-197), licensed to Eisai and Helsinn for co-marketing in the USA in 2003 (the same year as aprepitant). |
See text for further details.
Figure 4A summary of the physical, physiological, and psychological consequences of nausea and vomiting for the person suffering, as well as for any observers including health care professionals. The potential risk of infection from vomiting is also highlighted. Profile of the head from http://getdrawings.com/talking-head-silhouette.
Figure 5Summary of the pathways responsible for the induction of nausea and vomiting (blue arrows), the integrative regions in the brain stem (blue box indicates dorsal brain stem and nucleus tractus solitarius in particular) and the output pathways for nausea (green) and the motor outputs for vomiting (red box indicates the pathways in the ventral brain stem). See text for details of pathways. CB1, cannabinoid1 receptor; D2, dopamine2 receptor; H1, histamine1 receptor; M3/5, muscarinic3/5 acetylcholine receptor; 5-HT3-5-hydroxytryptamine3 receptor; 5-HT4-5-hydroxytryptamine4 receptor; NK1, tachykinin neurokinin 1 receptor. Adapted and modified from Stern et al. (2011).
Structures, receptor affinities, and actions of anti-emetic drugs.
| M1
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| 7.1 antagonist | 6.1 antagonist | ||||||||||
| 7.1 antagonist | 7.0–7.6 antagonist | 7.2–7.5 antagonist | 7.8 antagonist | α1 | α2A 5.9–6.6 α2B 7.2–8.3 α2C 6.9–7.4 antagonist at each | D5 6.9 antagonist 5-HT1A 6.2 antagonist 5-HT2C 7.6–8.2 antagonist 5-HT6 7.7–7.8 inverse agonist 5-HT7 7.6 inverse agonist | |||||
| 7.7 antagonist | 7.7 antagonist | 7.5 antagonist | D5 7.9 antagonist 5-HT7 7.9 inverse agonist 5-HT6 7.3–7.4 inverse agonist | ||||||||
| α2A
| α2C
| 5-HT2C
| |||||||||
| 5-HT3A | 5-HT4
| ||||||||||
| 7.6–8.2 antagonist | 5.7–6.1 antagonist | 6.7–7.3 antagonist | 5-HT1D 6.6 antagonist 5-HT7 6.3–6.6 antagonist 5-HT2B 5.8–6.4 antagonist 5-HT1A 5.7–5.8 antagonist | ||||||||
| α1 | 5-HT2C
| ||||||||||
| 5-HT3A ~ | |||||||||||
| 5-HT3A ~ | |||||||||||
| 5-HT3A | 5-HT4 6.3–7.1 antagonist | ||||||||||
| 5-HT3A | |||||||||||
| NK1
| |||||||||||
Data are from .
Figure 6Photograph of the packaging for Marzine (cyclizine, developed in 1947) indicating its use by NASA during the Apollo moon missions. With permission: Wellcome collection, Wellcome Library (WF/M/PL/191), London, United Kingdom.
Changing understanding of the role of gastric motility in the genesis of nausea and vomiting: Influences on drug discovery.
| [-2pt] | ||
| Other substituted benzamides (eventually shown to be 5-HT4 receptor agonists) | Cisapride | |
| Explored | Others | |
| Domperidone Increased gastric emptying in gastroparesis20 Alleviates symptoms of gastroparesis21 No effects on gastric emptying in healthy volunteers22 or in patients requiring video capsule delivery to the small intestine23 and no direct ability to influence contractility of human isolated stomach24 Low risk of cardiac QTc prolongation25 Registered for use in many countries but not in the USA21 | ||
| •Increase gastric emptying in healthy volunteers and in patients with gastroparesis but may not be sustained with long-term dosing29 | ||
| Gastric Dysrhythmia |
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Figure 7Two hypotheses for the relationship between disordered upper gastrointestinal tract motility and the sensation of nausea. These are not mutually exclusive but the efficacy of drugs targeted at sites A and B will differ depending upon which mechanism is in operation. In hypothesis A (left hand panel) the activation of central emetic pathways activates ascending pathways leading to the sensation of nausea, followed by descending autonomic pathways leading to delayed gastric emptying. An anti-nausea drug targeted centrally (site A) would block both nausea and the peripheral motility changes, so there will be a secondary return of gastric emptying to normal. In this hypothesis a drug targeted at site B may only have a small effect by reducing a positive reinforcing feedback from the centrally-driven disruption of motility. In hypothesis B (right hand panel) disordered upper digestive tract motility, usually resulting from disease (e.g., diabetic gastroparesis), is the primary driver for the genesis of nausea, leading to activation of visceral afferents or possibly the release of enteroendocrine agents into the blood for subsequent activity at the area postrema. A drug acting on the upper digestive tract (site B) would normalize gastric motility and remove the primary drive for nausea. Note that in this hypothesis, the “traditional prokinetic drugs” (with an exclusively peripheral action) have generally not been successful; potential alternatives are indicated. In this hypothesis a drug acting at the central site A would also be likely to indirectly reduce nausea by preventing activation of central pathways. ENS, enteric nervous system; ICC, interstitial cells of Cajal.
A summary of the key pieces of evidence implicating substance P and related tachykinins in emesis.
| 1936 | Substance P (SP) extracted from the vagus | Dog | von Euler, | •The vagus had been implicated in the induction of emesis by early animal studies (Hatcher, |
| 1951 | High levels of SP extracted from the digestive tract mucosa | Dog | Douglas et al., | •Digestive tract mucosa enterochromaffin cells shown to be a rich source of 5-HT in a range of species in the 1950s, accounting for the majority of 5-HT in the mammalian body (Faustini, |
| 1954 | High concentrations of SP in the area postrema (AP); Authors comment: “the AP only contains active substances by virtue of its chemoreceptive properties… One of the functions of some parts of this tissue may be to act as a chemoreceptor for substances in the blood stream to convert messages received in this way into nervous impulses.” | Dog | Amin et al., | •Although the AP was implicated in emesis by older papers (e.g., see Hatcher, |
| 1963 | Induction of emesis by subcutaneous administration of eledoisin (a tachykinin closely related to SP and extracted from posterior salivary glands of the octopod | Dog | Erspamer and Glasser, | •The frog skin tachykinin, pysalemin (subcutaneously and intravenously) induced vomiting in the dog Bertaccini et al. ( |
| 1981 | Immunohistochemical localization of SP in the AP to varicose processes but absence of SP-positive cell bodies | Rat | Armstrong et al., | •Findings confirmed and extended by Pickel and Armstong ( |
| 1981 | High levels of SP in human brainstem including area postrema | Human | Cooper et al., | •A study in 1955 (i.e., a year after the (Amin et al., |
| 1983 | Activation of AP neurons by ionophoretic application of SP | Dog | Carpenter et al., | •Electrophysiological evidence for excitatory effects of SP in a relevant species, but numerous other peptides had similar effects, possibly reducing the significance of the observation |
| 1984 | Demonstration of high levels of SP receptors in the | Rat | Helke et al., | •SP-sensitive receptors investigated using [125I]Bolton-Hunter SP |
| 1988 | Induction of retching in the urethane anesthetized ferret by topical application of SP (0.1 mM) to the fourth ventricle | Ferret | Wood, | •Proposed that the action was either directly on the AP or via access to the dorsal NTS, particularly the |
| 1992 | Acute administration of the ultrapotent capsaicin analog (RTX) to the ferret has anti-emetic effects against both centrally and peripherally acting stimuli | Ferret | Bhandari and Andrews, | •In the subsequent full paper (Andrews and Bhandhari, |
| 1993 | First preclinical publications showing anti-emetic efficacy of a non-peptide NK1 receptor antagonists (CP-99,994) | Ferret | Bountra et al., | •These publications were from scientists at Glaxo and Merck but the compound used (CP-99, 994) was a Pfizer compound (Watson et al., |
| 1997 | First clinical publication of anti-emetic effects on a non-peptide NK1 receptor antagonist (CP-122,721) against high dose cisplatin chemotherapy | Human | Kris et al., | •This study supported the translation of ferret data to human and demonstrated significant efficacy in the delayed phase, in contrast to the effects of 5-HT3 receptor antagonists (see text for details) |
| 2003 | Approval of Aprepitant (Emend®) by European Medicines Evaluation Agency and Food and Drug Administration for treatment of emesis induced by cisplatin chemotherapy | Human |
For detailed discussion see Andrews and Rudd (.
Summary of key drugs “repurposed” for the control of emesis.
| •Discovered by several groups in 19601 | •Tricyclic antidepressant; approved by the FDA in 19612 | •Inhibits 5-HT and noradrenaline transporters | •Reduced symptoms in patients with chronic nausea and vomiting (with pain as a predominant symptom) and in diabetic patients with unexplained vomiting4, 5 | |
| •Originally described by Rhone-Poulenc in 19566 | •Phenothiazine neuroleptic drug | •Can antagonize at H1, muscarinic M1/M2, D1, D2, D3 and D4, receptors, the α1 adrenoceptor and the 5HT2 receptor7, 8 | •Has found use in treatment of patients with intractable nausea and vomiting receiving palliative care where it is also used to treat severe delirium or agitation at the end of life9 | |
| •Synthesized in 200010 | •Antidepressant drug | •An antagonist at H1, alpha2 adrenoceptor, 5-HT2C, 5-HT2A and 5-HT3 receptors11 | •Several case reports and small studies suggest anti-emetic efficacy in patients undergoing surgery, suffering from hyperemesis gravidarum, chronic unexplained nausea and vomiting, and severe gastroparesis unresponsive to conventional treatments12, 13, 14 | |
| •A thienobenzodiazepine originally described by Eli Lilly in 198016 | •Atypical antipsychotic | •Has affinity for M1, 5-HT2A, 5-HT2B, 5-HT2C, M4, H1 > M3, M2, D2 > D4, D1, α1-adrenoceptor >5-HT | •Used to prevent and treat breakthrough chemotherapy-induced emesis when given alone and in combination with other anti-emetic drugs20 including patients receiving palliative care21, 22 | |
| •Synthesized in 1974 (by Gerhard Satzinger) at Parke-Davis (now owned by Warner-Lambert/Pfizer) as potential epilepsy drug, incorporating γ-aminobutyric acid into a lipophilic cyclohexane ring to cross the blood-brain barrier | •Approved by the FDA in 1994 to control partial seizures and in 2002 for conditions with neuropathic pain25, 26 | •No mechanistic studies in emesis but its analgesic effects are attributed to blockade of the α2/δ subunit of voltage-gated calcium channels27 | •First reported as a potential drug to treat nausea in CINV in 2003 and subsequent studies have extended this to PONV and possibly hyperemesis gravidarum27, 28 | |
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