Antitumour Anthracyclines: Progress and Perspectives.
Maristela B Martins-TeixeiraIvone CarvalhoPublished in: ChemMedChem (2020)
Anthracyclines are ranked among the most effective chemotherapeutics against cancer. They are glycoside drugs comprising the amino sugar daunosamine linked to a hydroxy anthraquinone aglycone, and act by DNA intercalation, oxidative stress generation and topoisomerase II poisoning. Regardless of their therapeutic value, multidrug resistance and severe cardiotoxicity are important limitations of anthracycline treatment that have prompted the discovery of novel analogues. This review covers the most clinically relevant anthracyclines and their development over decades, since the first discovered natural prototypes to recent semisynthetic and synthetic derivatives. These include registered drugs, drug candidates undergoing clinical trials, and compounds under pre-clinical investigation. The impact of the structural modifications on antitumour activity, toxicity and resistance profile is addressed.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- clinical trial
- early breast cancer
- drug induced
- papillary thyroid
- small molecule
- circulating tumor
- early onset
- structure activity relationship
- single molecule
- squamous cell
- molecular docking
- emergency department
- induced apoptosis
- phase ii
- young adults
- childhood cancer
- smoking cessation
- study protocol
- circulating tumor cells