| Literature DB >> 34068720 |
Richard E Kast1, Marc-Eric Halatsch2, Rafael Rosell3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pharmacological targeting aberrant activation of epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase signaling is an established approach to treating lung adenocarcinoma. Osimertinib is a tyrosine kinase approved and effective in treating lung adenocarcinomas that have one of several common activating mutations in epidermal growth factor receptor. The emergence of resistance to osimertinib after a year or two is the rule. We developed a five-drug adjuvant regimen designed to increase osimertinib's growth inhibition and thereby delay the development of resistance. Areas of Uncertainty: Although the assembled preclinical data is strong, preclinical data and the following clinical trial results can be discrepant. The safety of OPALS drugs when used individually is excellent. We have no data from humans on their tolerability when used as an ensemble. That there is no data from the individual drugs to suspect problematic interaction does not exclude the possibility. DATA SOURCES: All relevant PubMed.org articles on the OPALS drugs and corresponding pathophysiology of lung adenocarcinoma and glioblastoma were reviewed. Therapeutic Opinion: The five drugs of OPALS are in wide use in general medicine for non-oncology indications. OPALS uses the anti-protozoal drug pyrimethamine, the antihistamine cyproheptadine, the antibiotic azithromycin, the antihistamine loratadine, and the potassium sparing diuretic spironolactone. We show how these inexpensive and generically available drugs intersect with and inhibit lung adenocarcinoma growth drive. We also review data showing that both OPALS adjuvant drugs and osimertinib have data showing they may be active in suppressing glioblastoma growth.Entities:
Keywords: EGFR; NSCLC; cancer stem cells; glioblastoma; osimertinib; repurposing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34068720 PMCID: PMC8151869 DOI: 10.3390/cells10051148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Basic pharmacological attributes of the OPALS drugs, cyproheptadine, pyrimethamine, azithromycin, and spironolactone. T1/2 is the elimination half-life. References in text. All the OPALS drugs have empirical evidence of NSCLC and GB growth inhibition from preclinical studies.
| Drug | T 1/2 | Plasma Level | OPALS Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cyproheptadine | 16 h | 33 microg/L av | anticholinergic, Bcl-2 |
| Pyrimethamine | 4 d | 500 microg/L | DHFR inhibition, |
| Azithromycin | 2–3 d | 31 mg/L | MMP-9 reduction, autophagy inhibition |
| Loratadine | 8 h | 30 μg/L | lysosomal leakage |
| Spironolactone | 2 h | 140 microg/L | EGFR transactivation DNA repair inhibition |
Figure 1Schematic showing escape from osimertinib growth inhibition by increasing expression of non-mutated EGFR. References in text.
Inhibitory binding of cyproheptadine at histaminic (H), muscarinic (M), serotonergic (5HT), and dopamine (D) receptors.
| Receptor | Ki nM |
|---|---|
| H1 | 0.06 |
| M1 | 12 |
| M2 | 7 |
| M3 | 12 |
| M4 | 8 |
| M5 | 12 |
| 5HT1a | 59 |
| 5HT2a | 1.7 |
| 5HT2b | 1.5 |
| 5HT2c | 2.2 |
| D3 | 8 |
Azithromycin level after a single 500 mg oral dose. References in text.
| Post-Dose | Brain Microg/g | CSF Microg/mL | Serum Microg/mL |
|---|---|---|---|
| 24 h | 2.63 +/− 2.58 | <0.015 | 0.031 +/− 0.044 |
| 48 h | 3.64 +/− 3.81 | <0.015 | 0.016 +/− 0.011 |
| 72 h | 0.74 +/− 0.37 | <0.015 | 0.012 +/− 0.005 |
| 96 h | 0.41 | <0.015 | 0.008 |
Characteristic changes seen in mammalian cells that are associated with reduced cytotoxicity of pyrimethamine.
| Changes in Pyrimethamine Resistant Cancer Cells Compared to Sensitive Counterpart: |
|---|
| lower external folate requirement for growth |
| 3 x increased intracellular polyglutamated folate content |
| increased lysosome number |
| increased folylpolyglutamate synthetase |
| increased P-gp export activity |
| DHFR gene amplification |