Assessment in vitro of interactions between anti-cancer drugs and noncancer drugs commonly used by cancer patients

被引:0
|
作者
Andersson, Claes R. [1 ]
Ye, Jiawei [1 ,2 ]
Blom, Kristin [1 ]
Fryknas, Marten [1 ]
Larsson, Rolf [1 ]
Nygren, Peter [3 ]
机构
[1] Uppsala Univ, Dept Med Sci, Uppsala, Sweden
[2] Southeast Univ, Sch Med, Dept Med Lab Sci, Nanjing, Peoples R China
[3] Uppsala Univ, Dept Immunol Genet & Pathol, Uppsala, Sweden
关键词
anti-cancer drug; concomitant medication; combinations; drug interactions; PREVIOUSLY TREATED PATIENTS; RANDOMIZED PHASE-II; BREAST-CANCER; COLORECTAL-CANCER; PLUS SIMVASTATIN; ANTIDIARRHEA DRUG; DOUBLE-BLIND; LOPERAMIDE; CELLS; EFFICACY;
D O I
10.1097/CAD.0000000000001344
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Cancer patients often suffer from cancer symptoms, treatment complications and concomitant diseases and are, therefore, often treated with several drugs in addition to anticancer drugs. Whether such drugs, here denoted as 'concomitant drugs', have anticancer effects or interact at the tumor cell level with the anticancer drugs is not very well known. The cytotoxic effects of nine concomitant drugs and their interactions with five anti-cancer drugs commonly used for the treatment of colorectal cancer were screened over broad ranges of drug concentrations in vitro in the human colon cancer cell line HCT116wt. Seven additional tyrosine kinase inhibitors were included to further evaluate key findings as were primary cultures of tumor cells from patients with colorectal cancer. Cytotoxic effects were evaluated using the fluorometric microculture cytotoxicity assay (FMCA) and interaction analysis was based on Bliss independent interaction analysis. Simvastatin and loperamide, included here as an opioid agonists, were found to have cytotoxic effects on their own at reasonably low concentrations whereas betamethasone, enalapril, ibuprofen, metformin, metoclopramide, metoprolol and paracetamol were inactive also at very high concentrations. Drug interactions ranged from antagonistic to synergistic over the concentrations tested with a more homogenous pattern of synergy between simvastatin and protein kinase inhibitors in HCT116wt cells. Commonly used concomitant drugs are mostly neither expected to have anticancer effects nor to interact significantly with anticancer drugs frequently used for the treatment of colorectal cancer.
引用
收藏
页码:92 / 102
页数:11
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