LECTURE 24: ANTICANCER Flashcards

1
Q
  • Cancer is defined by two heritable properties:
A

i. Cells proliferate without restraint
ii. Cells invade and colonize spaces normally reserved for other cells

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2
Q

Outline the main treatment options for cancer

A

Surgery
* Removal of tumour tissue
* Difficult to ensure that the whole tumour is removed
* What if the tumour has metastasized?
Radiotherapy
* Generally targeted to tumour area
* Severe side effects
* What if tumour has metastasized?
Chemotherapy
* Treats whole body (including metastases)
* Severe side effects due to low therapeutic index
* Usually used in conjunction with surgery or radiation to
ensure tumour (and metastases) are completely
removed
Immunotherapy
* Stimulates the immune system to fight the cancer, typically by targeting tumour antigens

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3
Q

Outline the major reason for the severe side effects of cancer drug therapies

A

Cancer cells are host cells, just out of control
* The most obvious difference is that tumour cells divide uncontrollably
* Drug ‘selectivity’ is due to greater accumulation in rapidly dividing cells
* Cells at the centre of a tumour may not be dividing
* Normal cells that divide rapidly (e.g. bone marrow) are hit with adverse effects that can cause significant damage

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4
Q

genotoxic agents are

A

drugs that affect DNA integrity by directly targeting DNA

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5
Q

3 types of genotoxic agents

A
  1. intercalating agents
  2. alkylating agents
  3. enzyme inhibitors
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6
Q

Intercalating agents

A
  • These drugs wedge themselves into the spaces between nucleotides in DNA to interfere with transcription, replication and induce mutations
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7
Q

Intercalating agent eg

A

doxoribucin

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8
Q

Alkylating agents (The OGs)

A
  • These are highly electrophilic compounds that react with nucleophiles in DNA to form strong covalent bonds (particularly N7 of guanine)
  • This interferes with DNA replication and transcription, leading to mutations
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9
Q

alkylating agents eg

A

cyclophosphamide

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10
Q

enzyme inhibitors eg

A

topoisomerase I and II inhibitors

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11
Q

Anti metabolites

A

drugs that target enzymes involved in dNA synthesis
- They are structurally similar to metabolites of these enzymes so are mistakenly processed as if they are the metabolites they resemble
- This prevents subsequent steps in DNA synthesis

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12
Q

anti-metabolite eg

A

DNA polymerase inhibitors

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13
Q

Spindle inhibitors

A
  • Affect microtubule function - cell cannot divide and will die
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14
Q

spindle inhibitors eg

A

paclitaxel

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15
Q

how do spindle inhibitors works

A
  • Paclitaxel is a spindle inhibitor that specifically targets tubulin to prevent polymerisation
  • Cancer cells treated with paclitaxel have disrupted mitotic spindle assembly and chromosome segregation, blocking cell division
  • Mitosis cannot progress, meaning there is prolonged activation of the mitotic checkpoint, triggering apoptosis (or causing the cell to revert to G0 phase of cell cycle without dividing)
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16
Q

Endocrine interference eg

A
  • Oestrogen antagonists or selective oestrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) can be used to treat oestrogen receptor positive breast cancer (including in males)
17
Q

intercalating vs alkylating agents

A
  • Intercalation – drug slips between neighbouring base pairs of DNA, inhibiting DNA synthesis
  • Alkyllating – react with DNA bases and prevent cell division by cross-linking two strands of the double helix