Ciclopirox olamine’s effect on leukemic and myeloma cells: the full study

At the end of July, right before the summer holiday, Sherlock (grazie!) sent me the full ciclopirox olamine study that I posted about on July 15th (the nail fungus treatment, remember?). I will skip through it and provide only a few excerpts for discussion, trying not to repeat the information that is already in the abstract (http://tinyurl.com/lkmrz5).

One important statement is that CPX-induced cell death was dependent on chelation of intracellular iron and the inhibition of the iron-dependent enzyme ribonucleotide reductase (all we really need to know about ribonucleotide reductase, or RNR, is that it is an appealing target in cancer treatment. An RNR-inhibitor, such as CPX, is therefore one of the good guys, so to speak…).

Let’s see. A number of pages are devoted to material and methods…skip skip skip…let’s go to the study results. Aha…I had wondered how/why ciclopirox olamine had been chosen among a number of other off-patent drugs with previously unrecognized anti-cancer activity. The mystery was solved in the full study: a screening process identified CPX as a substance that inhibited the growth of leukemic cells that display features similar to leukemic stem cells.

CPX was also identified as a survivin-inhibitor. Survivin is a protein that is also a regulator of cell cycle and apoptosis, and cancer cells contain high levels of it (for more info, you can search my blog for “survivin”). CPX was found to decrease the levels of survivin in leukaemia, myeloma and solid tumour cells. So far, so good.

Remember reading about “gross organ toxicity” in the abstract? Well, that “gross” business puzzled me, so I looked it up and found that, in pathology, a gross examination of a specimen is an examination done with the bare eye…without the use of any instruments, such as a microscope. Ah. Okay. So, unless I am way off base, it appears that treatment with CPX causes no harm to any organs or loss of body weight…based on a “bare eye” examination. CPX did, however, decrease tumor weight and volume in 3 mouse models of leukemia by up to 65%. Great!

More good news: CPX reduced the viability of primary AML cells and inhibited engraftment of primary AML cells in NOD/SCID mouse models. Thus, CPX appears cytotoxic to leukemia stem cells. A killer of leukemic stem cells! Yeah!

Well, I don’t want to go into too much detail…for instance, I could provide you with a detailed description of how CPX binds intracellular iron in cancer cells or how the inhibition of ribonucleotide reductase is functionally important for the cytotoxic effects of CPX or how CPX sensitizes cells to cytarabine. But I won’t. Too much information could give me AND you a stomping headache!

Just one last thing. In the Discussion part, we can read that CPX could be advanced quickly into clinical trial for patients with refractory hematologic malignancies. However, due to possible differences in iron pools between species, toxicities of CPX not apparent in rodents and dogs may become evident in humans clinical trials. Alternatively, CPX may be less effective in patients who have been heavily transfused and have very high levels of iron stores.

The issue of toxicity is a serious one, of course, and the authors point out that the potential hematologic toxicity and its safety will have to be carefully evaluated in phase I clinical trials. Well, an interesting study, for sure…

1 Comment

  1. Thanks for this summary. Maybe something for me. I will discuss it with my Doctor.

    Hans

    ps. Perhaps the curcumin, inositol ans IP6, anything else, or combination I do not know, but my blood levels were good, stable, even a little better.

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