| Literature DB >> 31480477 |
Andrea Emanuele Guerini1, Luca Triggiani1, Marta Maddalo2, Marco Lorenzo Bonù1, Francesco Frassine1, Anna Baiguini1, Alessandro Alghisi1, Davide Tomasini3, Paolo Borghetti4, Nadia Pasinetti5, Roberto Bresciani6, Stefano Maria Magrini1, Michela Buglione1.
Abstract
Anticancer treatment efficacy is limited by the development of refractory tumor cells characterized by increased expression and activity of mechanisms promoting survival, proliferation, and metastatic spread. The present review summarizes the current literature regarding the use of the anthelmintic mebendazole (MBZ) as a repurposed drug in oncology with a focus on cells resistant to approved therapies, including so called "cancer stem cells". Mebendazole meets many of the characteristics desirable for a repurposed drug: good and proven toxicity profile, pharmacokinetics allowing to reach therapeutic concentrations at disease site, ease of administration and low price. Several in vitro studies suggest that MBZ inhibits a wide range of factors involved in tumor progression such as tubulin polymerization, angiogenesis, pro-survival pathways, matrix metalloproteinases, and multi-drug resistance protein transporters. Mebendazole not only exhibits direct cytotoxic activity, but also synergizes with ionizing radiations and different chemotherapeutic agents and stimulates antitumoral immune response. In vivo, MBZ treatment as a single agent or in combination with chemotherapy led to the reduction or complete arrest of tumor growth, marked decrease of metastatic spread, and improvement of survival. Further investigations are warranted to confirm the clinical anti-neoplastic activity of MBZ and its safety in combination with other drugs in a clinical setting.Entities:
Keywords: CSC; anticancer; cancer; cancer stem cells; chemoresistance; mebendazole; radioresistance; repurposing; stemness
Year: 2019 PMID: 31480477 PMCID: PMC6769799 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11091284
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Chemical structures of benzimidazole anthelmintics commonly prescribed for human (mebendazole and Albendazole) and veterinary (Fenbendazole and Flubendazole) use.
Pharmacokinetic studies in patients treated for hydatid disease. Cmax = peak serum concentration AUC = area under the curve T1/2 = elimination half-life.
| Dosage | Cmax and AUC | Half-Life of Elimination | Tissue Concentrations |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 mg/kg, single dose or chronic administration, 12 patients treated for cystic hydatid disease [ | Cmax 17.5 to 500 ng/mL (0.06–1.69 µM, mean 0.24 µM) after a single dose. In chronic therapy mean Cmax 0.47 µM and AUC five times higher than after single dose | T1/2 2.8–9.0 h, time to peak plasma concentration 1.5–7.25 h | Concentrations of MBZ found in the tissue and cyst material collected from two patients during surgery ranged from 59.5 to 206.6 ng/g wet weight |
| 1–12 g/day, 17 patients treated for hydatid cysts and 5 volunteers [ | Cmax 0.03–1.64 µM | T1/2 3.3–11.5 h | - |
| 1000 mg single dose, 8 healthy volunteers [ | mean Cmax 0.11 µM, mean AUC 207.2 µg·h/L | T1/2 mean 7.4 h | - |
| 1.5 g single dose or repeated 1 g administrations [ | Cmax 0.017–0.134 µM after single dose and up to 0.5 µM after repeated administrations | - | - |
Figure 2Schematization of antitumoral effects of MBZ. Green lines = induction and/or activation; red lines = inhibition and/or downregulation; green arrow = induction/overexpression induced by MBZ; red lightning bolt = inhibition/downregulation/degradation induced by MBZ. ECM = extracellular matrix; Cyt c = cytochrome c; casp3-7-8-9 = caspase 3-7-8-9; CSCs = cancer stem cells.
Ongoing studies registered at Clinicaltrials.Gov investigating MBZ as a repurposed drug in oncology. MTD = maximum tolerated dose.
| Phase | Condition | Intervention | Institution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 | Newly diagnosed high-grade glioma | Standard of care (surgery and radio-chemotherapy) followed by MBZ (MTD to define) + adjuvant sequential TMZ. | Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins |
| Phase 1 | Pediatric patients affected by medulloblastoma or high-grade glioma in progression after standard therapies | MBZ alone (MTD to define) | Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins |
| Phase 1–2 | Pediatric patients affected by low- or high-grade glioma | MBZ 50–200 mg/kg/day (MTD to define) in combination with vincristine, carboplatin, and temozolomide (low grade) or bevacizumab and irinotecan (high-grade glioma) | Cohen Children’s Medical Center of New York |
| Phase 2 | Advanced or metastatic gastrointestinal cancer or cancer of unknown origin | MBZ alone, dose escalation (50–4000 mg), and pharmacokinetic analysis | Uppsala University |
| Phase 2 | Metastatic or advanced cancer (different organs and histology) | MBZ 100 mg b.i.d. + metformin up to 1000 mg b.i.d. + doxycycline 100 mg/die + atorvastatin up to 80 mg/die; “real world setting”, with or without concomitant standard of treatment | Care Oncology Clinic, London |
| Phase 2 | Stage IV colorectal cancer | MBZ (dose not specified) concomitant with adjuvant FOLFOX + bevacizumab | Tanta University |
Studies reporting MBZ anticancer activity in vitro and its mechanisms of action. IC50 = half maximal inhibitory concentration; EC50 = concentration required to achieve a half-maximal effect.
| Author Year | Cell Line | Ic50 Antiproliferative | Biological Effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mukhopadhyay T et al. 2002 [ | Human Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC): A549, H1299, H460. Human breast, ovary, and colon carcinoma and osteosarcoma | NSCLC cell lines: ~0.16 µM. Other cell lines: 0.1–0.8 μM. | Not specified. Growth inhibition of about five-fold after exposure of H460 and A549 cells to 0.165 μM for 5 days. No effect on HUVECs and normal fibroblasts also at 1 μM. |
| Sasaki J et al. 2002 [ | Three human NSCLC cell lines | A549 0.417 µM, H1299 0.260 µM, H460 0.203 µM | 0.5 µM tubulin depolymerization. Induction of p53 and p21 expression after 24 h, induction of apoptosis after 48 h in 35% of H460 cells and 15% of A549 cells. |
| Martarelli D et al. 2008 [ | Human adrenocortical cancer H295R and SW-13 | H295R 0.23 μM, SW-13 0.27 μM | Cell invasion inhibition (0.085 μM). Cytochrome c and caspase-9 and 3 mediated apoptosis. |
| Doudican NA et al. 2008 [ | Human melanoma M-14 and A-375 | Not specified | Decrease in XIAP levels, increase in apoptosis markers (cleaved PARP and caspase 9) at 0.5 μM. |
| Bai RY et al. 2011 [ | A panel of 10 glioblastoma cell lines. | Between 0.11 and 0.31 μM | Inhibition of tubulin polymerization in 060919 cells at 0.1 µM for 72 h. |
| Doudican N et al. 2013 [ | Human melanoma SK-Mel-19 and M-14 | SK-Mel-19 0.32 µM, M14 0.30 µM. | Apoptosis induction at 1 µM for 24 h in 25% of M-14 cells and 31% of SK-Mel-19. At 0.5 µM only 26% of SK-Mel-19 cells maintained proliferative capacity. |
| Nygren P et al. 2013 [ | Human colon cancer cell lines HT29, HCT-8 and SW626, HCT 116 and RKO | Less than 5 μM for all the lines tested and <1 μM for 3 lines | Inhibition of several kinases (including BCR–ABL and BRAF) in the nanomolar range. |
| Coyne CP et al. 2014 [ | Human mammary adenocarcinoma SKBr-3 | About 0.35 μM at 96h and 0.25μM at 182 h. IC80 at 182 h ~0.30 μM | Survival fraction reduced to 36.9–9.2% after exposure to 0.2–2.5 μM for 96–182 h. Synergy with anti-HER2 conjugates with anthracyclines or gemcitabine: 0.15 μM MBZ ↓ survival fraction from 48.7% to 7.7% at chemotherapeutic-equivalent concentrations of 10−8 M and from 79.5% to 8.7% at 10−10 M. |
| Larsen AR et al. 2015 [ | DAOY human medulloblastoma | Not specified | Sonic hedgehog (SHH) pathway inhibition: inhibition o.d. SMO mutant proteins and reduction in GLI1 expression (0.1–1 μM, IC50 0.516 μM). Inhibition of cell proliferation (0.1 μM) and primary cilium assembly, induction of apoptosis (1 μM). |
| Bai RY et al. 2015 [ | A panel of 8 medulloblastoma cell lines | Between 0.13 and 1 μM after 72 h | Inhibition of VEGFR2 autophosphorylation, at 1–10 μM in cultured HUVECs and with an IC50 of 4.3 μM in a cell-free kinase assay. |
| Human gastric cancer ACP-02, ACP-03 and AGP-01 (malignant ascites) | ACP-02 0.39 μM, AGP-01 0.59 μM, ACP-03 1.25 µM | Disruption of microtubules, inhibition of invasion and migration and of MMP-2 activity. | |
| Williamson T et al. 2016 [ | Colo-rectal carcinoma cell lines DLD-1, HCT-116, HT29, and SW480 | DLD-1 0.28 μM, HCT-116 0.25 μM, HT29 0.20 μM, and SW480 0.81 μM | Not specified. |
| Simbulan-Rosenthal CM et al. 2017 [ | Patient-derived melanoma NRAS mutated (BAK and BUL) and BRAF mutated (STU) | Not specified | Inhibition of several kinases, including BRAF wild type and BRAFV600E (with a Kd of 210 and 230 nM) and MEK. Inhibition of MAPK/ERK pathway, induction of apoptosis, synergy with trametinib |
| Zhang F et al. 2017 [ | Human head and neck squamous cell carcinoma CAL27 and SCC15 | CAL27 1.28 and SCC15 2.64 μM | Apoptosis induction as a single drug. Strong synergistic effect with cisplatin. Increase in CAL27 and inhibition in SCC15 cells of proliferation related pathways |
| De Witt M et al. 2017 [ | GL261 murine glioma | Cell viability suppression 160 nM | EC50 for microtubule depolymerization 132 nM, mitotic arrest induction 192 nM |
| Pinto LC et al. 2017 [ | AGP-01 intestinal type adenocarcinoma | Not specified | Inhibition of P-gp and MRP1 at 1.0 μM for 24 h. Inhibition of MATE1 at 0.1–1.0 μM |
| Blom K et al. 2017 [ | THP-1 monocyte and HT29 colon cancer co-culture | Not specified | 1–10 μM for 6 h increased release of pro-inflammatory M1 cytokines (such as IL-1β, TNF, IL8, and IL6) and surface markers (CD80 and CD 86), induction of antitumor response in co-culture. Induction of |
| Markowitz D et al. 2017 [ | Human GBM14 glioblastoma Murine GL261 glioma | Not specified | Radiosensitization with an EC50 of 35 nM. Cytoplasmic sequestration of DDRp Chk2 (EC50 31 nM) and Nbs1 (EC50 25 nM) |
| Walf-Vorderwülbecke V et al. 2018 [ | Eight different Acute Myeloid Leukemia cell lines | IC50s for cell viability between 0.07 and 0.26 µM | Degradation of c-MYB and inhibition of its expression. Reduction in colony formation (>80% after exposure of THP1 AML cells for 16 h at 10 µM) |
| Rubin J et al. 2018 [ | Co-culture of PBMCs, A549 cells and human fibroblasts or HUVEC cells | Not specified | 0.3–10 μM increased release of pro-inflammatory cytokines, reduced levels of VEGF and VCAM-1, potentiated killing of A549 NSCLC cells mediated by CD3/IL2 activated PBMCs |
| Skibinski CG et al. 2018 [ | Seven meningioma cell lines | IC50s for cell viability after 72 h 0.26–0.42 μM | Reduced clonogenic activity, induced cytotoxicity, increased levels of cleaved caspase-3 and PARP and reduced colony formation |
| Kralova V et al. 2018 [ | PE/CA-PJ15 and H376 oral SCC; DOK premalignant oral keratinocytes | Not specified | PE/CA-PJ15 and H376: 0.1–0.25 μM MBZ or FBZ inhibition of kinases (FAK) and GTPases (Rho-A, Rac1); dose dependent migration inhibition (0.1–5 μM) |
| Zhang L et al. 2019 [ | SUM159PT and MDA-MB-231 TNBC | 0.35 µM in monolayers and 0.4 µM in mammospheres after 72 h. | 0.5 µM arrest in the G2/M phase; significant radiosensitizing effect at all radiation doses tested (1–8 Gy). Mebendazole at 0.35 and 0.7 µM dose-dependent decrease of ALDH1 positive CSCs; Hedgehog pathway inhibition. ↑ fraction of apoptotic cells, ↑ DNA DSBs |
| Sung SJ et al. 2019 [ | HUVECs | IC50s for cell proliferation after 48 h 0.7–2.5 μM | Inhibition of VEGF or bFGF induced migration (IC50 0.7–0.9 μM) and tube formation (IC50 0.8–1.5 μM); ↑ p53 level up to 2.9 fold |
| Blom K et al. 2019 [ | THP-1 monocytes and macrophages. | Not specified | DYRK1B inhibition IC50 of 360 nM and kD of 7 nM. |
| Pinto LC et al. 2019 [ | AGP01 gastric cancer | Not specified | 0.5–1 μM ↑ caspase 3 and 7 activity, ↓ C-MYC mRNA and C-MY. Cell cycle arrest in G0/G1 and G2/M phases at 0.5 μM and 1.0 μM. Apoptosis induction 68% (0.5 μM) and 74% (1 μM) of cells at 72 h |
Studies reporting MBZ anticancer activity in vivo and its mechanisms of action. Abbreviations: e.o.d = every other day; I.p. = intra-peritoneally.
| Author and Year | CELL LINES TESTED | DOSE | BIOLOGICAL EFFECT IN VIVO | ANTITITUMOR EFFECT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mukhopadhyay T et al. 2002 [ | H460 and A549 human NSCLC. K1735 murine melanoma. | 0.4–0.8–1 mg/mouse/e.o.d. (oral) | Angiogenesis inhibition Metastatic spread inhibition | H460: tumor growth inhibition of 30% (0.4 mg) and 80% (0.8 mg) and almost complete arrest of growth (1 mg/mice/e.o.d.) A549: 80% reduction of metastases number in lungs (1 mg/mouse/e.o.d.) K1735 allograft: 1 mg growth inhibition of ~70%. |
| Martarelli D et al. 2008 [ | H295R and SW-13 human adrenocortical cancer | 1 or 2 mg/mice/day (oral) | Apoptosis induction Invasion inhibition Metastatic spread inhibition | H295R: about 50% (1 mg) and 60% (2 mg) tumor volume reduction |
| Bai RY et al. 2011 [ | GL261 murine glioma and 060,919 human GBM | 50 mg/kg (oral) | Not specified | Survival increase in GL261: 29 d CTRL vs. 41 d TMZ vs. 49 d MBZ vs. 50 d TMZ + MBZ vs 36 d ABZ 50 mg/kg vs 39 d ABZ 150 mg/kg |
| Doudican NA et al. 2013 [ | M-14 human melanoma | 1 or 2 mg/mouse/day (oral by gavage) | XIAP inhibition Apoptosis induction | Tumor growth inhibition of 83% (1 mg) and 77% (2 mg) |
| Larsen AR et al. 2015 [ | DAOY human medulloblastoma | 25–50 mg/kg (oral) | Sonic Hedgehog pathway inhibition | Survival increase: 75 d control group (CTRL) versus 94 d MBZ 25 mg/kg versus 113 d MBZ 50 mg/kg |
| Bai RY et al. 2015 [ | D425 human medulloblastoma. Murine parental or SMO-D477G mutated medulloblastoma. | 50 mg/kg/day (oral in food) | Angiogenesis inhibition | Survival increase in murine medulloblastoma: 150% increase in the parental line and 100% in |
| Bai RY et al. 2015 [ | GL261 murine glioma D425 human medulloblastoma | 50 mg/kg of polymorph A, B or C MBZ (oral by gavage) | Not specified | Survival increase, enhanced by elacridar (ELD) |
| Williamson T et al. 2016 [ | HT29 or SW480 human colorectal cancer APCmin/+ model | 50 mg/kg or 35 mg/kg (oral by gavage) | Inhibition of several pathways (MYC, COX2 and Bcl-2) and cytokines. Angiogenesis inhibition. | Tumor volume and weight reduction: respectively 62% and 65% in HT29 and 67% and 59% in SW480 (50 mg/kg) APCmin/+ chemoprevention model: reduction of tumor numbers 56% as a single agent (35 mg/kg) and up to 90% in combination with sulindac |
| Simbulan-Rosenthal CM et al. 2017 [ | BAK human melanoma | 40 mg/kg (oral by gavage) | MEK1/2 and ERK1/2 inhibition | MBZ or trametinib (1 or 3 mg/kg) showed no growth inhibition as single agents, in combination 50% volume reduction and increased survival |
| Zhang et al. 2017 [ | CAL27 human head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | 7.5 mg/kg i.p. e.o.d | Cell differentiation | Slight volume increased, induction of cell differentiation (extensive keratinization, diminished expression of proliferation markers and up-regulated expression of differentiation markers). |
| De Witt M et al. 2017 [ | GL261 murine glioma | 50–100 mg/kg of polymorph C MBZ (oral) | Not specified | Survival increase: 10 d CTRL vs 11 d voncristine vs 17 d MBZ 50 mg/kg vs. 19 d MBZ 100 mg/kg |
| Walf-Vorderwülbecke V et al. 2018 [ | THP1 human acute myeloid leukemia | 200 mg/kg of diet (oral, mixed in food) | c-MYB degradation | Growth inhibition and survival increase (~ 65 days vs. ~40 days in CTRL group) |
| Skibinski CG et al. 2018 [ | KT21MG1 human meningioma | 50 mg/kg/day in high fat diet | Apoptosis induction, angiogenesis inhibition | KT21MG1 intercranial xenograft: median survival 19 d in CTRL group, 30 d MBZ 33.5 d RT (12 Gy) and 39 d RT + MBZ |
| Zhang L et al. 2019 [ | SUM159PT human TNBC | 10 or 20 mg/kg 5 days/week i.p. | Radiosensitization | MBZ alone modest effect, IR 10 Gy evident growth delay potentiated by MBZ 20 mg/kg |