Repurposing drugs for highly prevalent diseases: pentoxifylline, an old drug and a new opportunity for diabetic kidney disease.
Javier Donate-CorreaMaría Dolores Sanchez-NiñoAinhoa González-LuisCarla FerriAlberto Martín-OliveraErnesto Martín-NúñezBeatriz Fernandez-FernandezVíctor G TaguaCarmen Mora-FernándezAlberto Ortiz ArduanJuan Francisco Navarro-GonzálezPublished in: Clinical kidney journal (2022)
Diabetic kidney disease is one of the most frequent complications in patients with diabetes and constitutes a major cause of end-stage kidney disease. The prevalence of diabetic kidney disease continues to increase as a result of the growing epidemic of diabetes and obesity. Therefore, there is mounting urgency to design and optimize novel strategies and drugs that delay the progression of this pathology and contain this trend. The new approaches should go beyond the current therapy focussed on the control of traditional risk factors such as hyperglycaemia and hypertension. In this scenario, drug repurposing constitutes an economic and feasible approach based on the discovery of useful activities for old drugs. Pentoxifylline is a nonselective phosphodiesterase inhibitor currently indicated for peripheral artery disease. Clinical trials and meta-analyses have shown renoprotection secondary to anti-inflammatory and antifibrotic effects in diabetic patients treated with this old known drug, which makes pentoxifylline a candidate for repurposing in diabetic kidney disease.
Keyphrases
- type diabetes
- risk factors
- wound healing
- clinical trial
- peripheral artery disease
- drug induced
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- small molecule
- randomized controlled trial
- cardiovascular disease
- meta analyses
- glycemic control
- adipose tissue
- bone marrow
- body mass index
- skeletal muscle
- high throughput
- phase ii
- electronic health record