| Literature DB >> 31261861 |
Bahare Salehi1, Patrick Valere Tsouh Fokou2, Lauve Rachel Tchokouaha Yamthe3, Brice Tchatat Tali4, Charles Oluwaseun Adetunji5, Amirhossein Rahavian6, Fhatuwani Nixwell Mudau7, Miquel Martorell8, William N Setzer9, Célia F Rodrigues10, Natália Martins11,12, William C Cho13, Javad Sharifi-Rad14.
Abstract
Prostate cancer is a heterogeneous disease, the second deadliest malignancy in men and the most commonly diagnosed cancer among men. Traditional plants have been applied to handle various diseases and to develop new drugs. Medicinal plants are potential sources of natural bioactive compounds that include alkaloids, phenolic compounds, terpenes, and steroids. Many of these naturally-occurring bioactive constituents possess promising chemopreventive properties. In this sense, the aim of the present review is to provide a detailed overview of the role of plant-derived phytochemicals in prostate cancers, including the contribution of plant extracts and its corresponding isolated compounds.Entities:
Keywords: medicinal plants; phytotherapy; plant formulas; prostate cancer; secondary metabolites
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31261861 PMCID: PMC6683070 DOI: 10.3390/nu11071483
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Relative risk of prostate cancer in patients with a positive family history.
| Risk Group | Relative Risk of Prostate Cancer |
|---|---|
| Father and brother had prostate cancer | 9 |
| ≥2 first degree relatives having prostate cancer | 4.39 |
| Brothers having prostate cancer | 3.14 |
| First degree relative with prostate cancer at the age of<65 | 2.87 |
| Second degree relative with prostate cancer | 2.52 |
| One first degree relative with prostate cancer | 2.48 |
| Father having prostate cancer | 2.35 |
| First degree relative with prostate cancer at the age of ≥65 | 1.92 |
Classification of the risk groups of prostate cancer [83].
| Risk Group | Clinical Stage | PSA (ng/mL) | Gleason Score | Biopsy Criteria |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low | T1a or T1c | <10 | 2–6 | Unilateral or <50% of core involved |
| Intermediate | T1b, T1c, or T2a | <10 | 3 + 4 = 7 | Bilateral |
| High | T1b, T1c, T2b, or T3 | 10–20 | 4 + 3 = 7 | >50% of core involved or perineural invasion or ductal differentiation |
| Very high | T4 | >20 | 8–10 | Lymphovascular invasion or neuroendocrine differentiation |
Medicinal plants with anti-prostate cancer effects.
| Plant Species | Family | In Vitro | In Vivo | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Fabaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Asteraceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Asteraceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Amaryllidaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Xanthorrhoeaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Annonaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Apiaceae | - | + | [ |
|
| Annonaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Combretaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Apocynaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Fabaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Euphorbiaceae | + | + | [ |
|
| Berberidaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Malpighiaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Fabaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Solanaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Caricaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Apocynaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Amaranthaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Euphorbiaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Cornaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Costaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Rosaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Iridaceae | + | + | [ |
|
| Zingiberaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Poaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Poaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Euphorbiaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Euphorbiaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Simaroubaceae | + | + | [ |
|
| Rutaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Polygonaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Polygonaceae | + |
| [ |
| Moraceae | + |
| [ | |
| Moraceae | + |
| [ | |
|
| Amaranthaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Fabaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Fabaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Rutaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Malvaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Asteraceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Malvaceae | + | + | [ |
|
| Fabaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Primulaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Annonaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Celastraceae | + | + | [ |
|
| Fabaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Lamiaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Lamiaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Lamiaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Lamiaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Moringaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Lamiaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Ranunculaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Poaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Paeoniaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Rutaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Phyllanthaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Phyllanthaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Phyllanthaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Phyllanthaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Plumbaginaceae | + | - | [ |
| Asparagaceae | + |
| [ | |
|
| Meliaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Myrtaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Lythraceae | + | + | [ |
|
| Combretaceae | + | + | [ |
|
| Campanulaceae | + | + | [ |
| Lamiaceae | + |
| [ | |
|
| Lamiaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Asteraceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Fabaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Fabaceae | + | + | [ |
|
| Combretaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Combretaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Urticaceae | + |
| [ |
|
| Vitaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Asteraceae | - | + | [ |
|
| Solanaceae |
| + | [ |
|
| Annonaceae | + | - | [ |
|
| Rutaceae | + | + | [ |
|
| Zingiberaceae | + | + | [ |
+: Showed in vitro or in vivo antiproliferative effect; -: Not found.
Figure 1Plant species with anti-prostate cancer potential and its respective modes of action.
Plant derived-compounds with anti-prostate cancer effects.
| Bioactive Compounds | In Vitro | In Vivo | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| (−)-Anonaine | + | - | [ |
| (−)-Caaverine | + | - | [ |
| (−)-Nuciferine | + | - | [ |
| 6-Hydroxycrinamine | + | - | [ |
| 7-Hydroxydehydronuciferine | + | - | [ |
| Capsaicin | + | - | [ |
| Crinamine | + | - | [ |
| Emetine | + | + | [ |
| Liriodenine | + | - | [ |
| Lycorine | + | + | [ |
| Matrine | + | - | [ |
| Oxymatrine | + | - | [ |
| Oxysophocarpine | + | - | [ |
| Schisanspheninal A | + | - | [ |
| Sophocarpine | + | - | [ |
| Tetrandrine | + | - | [ |
|
| |||
| Crocetin | + | - | [ |
| Crocin | + | - | [ |
|
| |||
| ( | + | - | [ |
|
| |||
| α-Mangostin | + | + | [ |
| γ-Tocopherol | + | - | [ |
| δ-Tocotrienol | + | - | [ |
| (-)-5,7-Difluoroepicatechin-3- | + | - | [ |
| (-)-Epicatechin-3- | + | - | [ |
| 10-Gingerol | + | - | [ |
| 6-Gingerol | + | - | [ |
| 6-Prenylnaringenin | + | - | [ |
| 6-Shogoal | + | - | [ |
| 7- | + | - | [ |
| 8-Gingerol | + | - | [ |
| 8-Prenylnaringenin | + | - | [ |
| Afzelin | + | - | [ |
| Altholactone | + | - | [ |
| Apigenin | + | [ | |
| Camptothin B | + | - | [ |
| Catechin | + | - | [ |
| Catechin-3- | + | - | [ |
| Chlorogenic acid | + | - | [ |
| Chrysin | + | - | [ |
| Cinnamaldehyde | + | - | [ |
| Cornusiin A | + | - | [ |
| Cornusiin H | + | - | [ |
| Curcumin | + | + | [ |
| Decursin | + | - | [ |
| Decursinol angelate | + | - | [ |
| Dehydrozingerone | + | - | [ |
| Delphinidin | + | + | [ |
| Ellagic acid | + | + | [ |
| Eugenol | + | - | [ |
| Fisetin | + | + | [ |
| Flavokawain A | + | + | [ |
| Flavopiridol | + | + | [ |
| Garcinol | + | + | [ |
| Ginkgetin | + | + | [ |
| Hesperetin | + | - | [ |
| Hirsutenone | + | - | [ |
| HLBT-100 or HLBT-001 (5,3′-dihydroxy- 6,7,8,4′-tetramethoxyflavanone) | + | - | [ |
| Honokiol | + | - | [ |
| Icarisid II | + | - | [ |
| Isoangustone A | + | - | [ |
| Isovitexin | + | - | [ |
| Juglone | + | - | [ |
| Licoricidin | + | - | [ |
| Magnolol | + | - | [ |
| Mangiferin | + | + | [ |
| Maysin | + | - | [ |
| Methyl gallate | + | - | [ |
| Osthol | + | - | [ |
| Oxyfadichalcones A | + | - | [ |
| Oxyfadichalcones B | + | - | [ |
| Oxyfadichalcones C | + | - | [ |
| Oxyfadichalcones D | + | - | [ |
| Oxyfadichalcones E | + | - | [ |
| Oxyfadichalcones F | + | - | [ |
| Oxyfadichalcones G | + | - | [ |
| Paeonol | + | + | [ |
| Peperotetraphin | + | - | [ |
| Physangulatins I | + | - | [ |
| Plumbagin | + | + | [ |
| Punicalagin | + | - | [ |
| Quercetin | + | + | [ |
| Resveratrol | + | + | [ |
| Rutin | + | - | [ |
| Tannic acid | + | - | [ |
| Tricin | + | - | [ |
| Xanthohumol | + | - | [ |
|
| |||
| Agglutinin | + | + | [ |
| Diffusa cyclotide 1 | + | - | [ |
| Diffusa cyclotide 2 | + | - | [ |
| Diffusa cyclotide 3 | + | + | [ |
| Lectin ConBr | + | - | [ |
| Lectin ConM | + | - | [ |
| Lectin DLasiL | + | - | [ |
| Lectin DSclerL | + | - | [ |
|
| |||
| α-Santalol | + | + | [ |
| 4 | + | - | [ |
| (20 | + | + | [ |
| Andrographolide | + | + | [ |
| Celastrol | + | + | [ |
| Citral | + | - | [ |
| Diosgenin | + | - | [ |
| Euphol | + | - | [ |
| Isocuparenal | + | - | [ |
| Jungermannenone A | + | - | [ |
| Jungermannenone B | + | - | [ |
| Muricins M | + | - | [ |
| Muricins N | + | - | [ |
| Nummularic acid | + | - | [ |
| Oenotheralanosterol B | + | - | [ |
| Plectranthoic acid | + | - | [ |
| Sutherlandioside D | + | - | [ |
| Widdaranal A | - | [ | |
| Widdaranal B | + | - | [ |
| Widdarol peroxide | + | - | [ |
| Withaferin A | + | - | [ |
-, no effect observed; +, positive effect.
Clinical trials showing the anti-prostate cancer potential of plant-derived phytochemicals.
| Phytochemicals/Formulae | Bioactive Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Danshen ( | Protective effects; Improved survival (5–10%) | [ |
| TCM formulae (Chai-Hu-Jia-Long-Gu-Mu-Li-Tang) | Improved survival | [ |
| Pomegranate juice | Extension of PSA doubling time, with no adverse effects | [ |
| Pomegranate, green tea, broccoli, turmeric | Decreased PSA levels | [ |
| Resveratrol | Decreased the circulating levels of androgen precursors | [ |
| Extension of PSA doubling time, with no adverse effects | [ | |
| PC-SPEC | Decreased PSA levels | [ |