| Literature DB >> 33912588 |
Vivek R Bora1, Bhoomika M Patel1.
Abstract
As of September 19, 2020, about 30 million people have been infected with the novel corona virus disease 2019 (COVID-19) globally, and the numbers are increasing at an alarming rate. The disease has a tremendous impact on every aspect of life, but one of the biggest, related to human health and medical sciences, is its effect on cancer. Nearly 2% of the total COVID-19 patients prior to May 2020 had cancer, and the statistics are quite frightening as the patient can be referred to as "doubly unfortunate" to suffer from cancer with the added misery of infection with COVID-19. Data regarding the present situation are scarce, so this review will focus on the deadly duo of COVID-19 and cancer. The focus is on molecular links between COVID-19 and cancer as inflammation, immunity, and the role of angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2). Complications may arise or severity may increase in cancer patients due to restrictions imposed by respective authorities as an effort to control COVID-19. The impact may vary from patient to patient and factors may include a delay in diagnosis, difficulty managing both cancer therapy and COVID-19 at same time, troubles in routine monitoring of cancer patients, and delays in urgent surgical procedures and patient care. The effect of anti-cancer agents on the condition of cancer patients suffering from COVID-19 and whether these anti-cancer agents can be repurposed for effective COVID-19 treatment are discussed. The review will be helpful in the management of deadly duo of COVID-19 and cancer.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; anti-cancer drugs; cancer; drug repurposing; immunity; inflammation
Year: 2021 PMID: 33912588 PMCID: PMC8072279 DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2021.643004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Biosci ISSN: 2296-889X
FIGURE 1Link between cancer and COVID-19. On the left, cancer progression is illustrated. Cancer is a disease caused by exposure to carcinogens, factors such as smoking, exposure to radiation, UV rays, working environment, and heredity can increase the risk of cancer. Any part of the body can be mutated resulting in cancer. After mutation there is uncontrolled growth of the mutated cells leading to the formation of a tumor, the tumor is non-communicable. Systemic inflammation, loss of function of the respective organ or part of body, coagulation, and metabolic abnormalities are the primary effects of cancer. As cancer progresses to advanced stages, metastasis along with increased susceptibility to secondary infections is observed leading to multiple organ failure and ultimately death. On the right, COVID-19 progression is illustrated. The source of COVID-19, a viral infection, is SARS-CoV-2, risk factors include immune status, age, and direct contact with the virus or infected person. The virus enters through the respiratory system into the human body and gets entry into the lung cells, where the replication of the virus occurs. COVID-19 is highly communicable and leads to fever, headache, loss of smell and taste, along with systemic inflammation and difficulty in breathing. Secondary infection to other organs is observed if the infection is chronic leading to lung failure, coagulation, and acute respiratory distress syndrome. Multiple organ failure leading ultimately to death is observed in COVID-19.
FIGURE 2Impact of COVID-19 on cancer. Impact on diagnosis, treatment, and research.
FIGURE 3Effect of COVID-19 on cancer patients. Effect of COVID-19 on cancer patients with respect to inflammation, and changes to the respiratory system, health, and quality of life.
Anti-cancer agent interaction with COVID-19 agent.
| Regorafenib | Azithromycin | Multikinase inhibitor specially inhibits tyrosine kinase | Reduction in therapeutic potential |
| Vinblastin | Azithromycin | Inhibition of mitosis leading to cell death | P-glycoprotein serum levels are increased |
| Doxorubicin | Chloroquine | Inhibition of topoisomerase II and initiation of apoptosis | Cardiac related abnormalities |
| Trastuzumab | Chloroquine | Inhibition of HER2 | Cardiac related abnormalities |
| Fluorouracil | Anakinra | Inhibition of thymidylate synthase | Suppression of immunity |
| Fluorouracil | Tocilizumab | Inhibition of thymidylate synthase | Suppression of immunity |
| Durvalumab | Anakinra | Inhibition of PD-L1 | Reduced therapeutic efficacy |
| Enzalutamide | Favipiravir | Competitive binding of androgen, inhibition of tumor gene transcription | Reduction in action of antiviral agent |
| Abiraterone | Tocilizumab | Androgen biosynthesis inhibitor | Tocilizumab reduced abiraterone as CYP3A4 inducer |
| Abiraterone | Colchicine | Androgen biosynthesis inhibitor | Increase action of abiraterone as CYP3A4 inhibitor |
| Docetexel | Tocilizumab | Inhibition of microtubular depolymerization | Tocilizumab reduced docetexel as CYP3A4 inducer |
| Ruxolitinib | Tocilizumab | Inhibits myelofibrosis and JAK | Tocilizumab reduced ruxolitinib as CYP3A4 inducer |
| Paclitaxel | Tocilizumab | Inhibits cell division by altering chromosomal segregation | Tocilizumab reduced paclitaxel as CYP3A4 inducer |