Repurposing of Chronically Used Drugs in Cancer Therapy: A Chance to Grasp

Despite the advancement in drug discovery for cancer therapy, drug repurposing remains an exceptional opportunistic strategy. This approach offers many advantages (faster, safer, and cheaper drugs) typically needed to overcome increased challenges, i.e., side effects, resistance, and costs associate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancers 2023-06, Vol.15 (12), p.3199
Hauptverfasser: Hijazi, Mohamad Ali, Gessner, André, El-Najjar, Nahed
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creator Hijazi, Mohamad Ali
Gessner, André
El-Najjar, Nahed
description Despite the advancement in drug discovery for cancer therapy, drug repurposing remains an exceptional opportunistic strategy. This approach offers many advantages (faster, safer, and cheaper drugs) typically needed to overcome increased challenges, i.e., side effects, resistance, and costs associated with cancer therapy. However, not all drug classes suit a patient's condition or long-time use. For that, repurposing chronically used medications is more appealing. This review highlights the importance of repurposing anti-diabetic and anti-hypertensive drugs in the global fight against human malignancies. Extensive searches of all available evidence (up to 30 March 2023) on the anti-cancer activities of anti-diabetic and anti-hypertensive agents are obtained from multiple resources (PubMed, Google Scholar, ClinicalTrials.gov, Drug Bank database, ReDo database, and the National Institutes of Health). Interestingly, more than 92 clinical trials are evaluating the anti-cancer activity of 14 anti-diabetic and anti-hypertensive drugs against more than 15 cancer types. Moreover, some of these agents have reached Phase IV evaluations, suggesting promising official release as anti-cancer medications. This comprehensive review provides current updates on different anti-diabetic and anti-hypertensive classes possessing anti-cancer activities with the available evidence about their mechanism(s) and stage of development and evaluation. Hence, it serves researchers and clinicians interested in anti-cancer drug discovery and cancer management.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/cancers15123199
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source PubMed Central Open Access; MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central
subjects Angiogenesis
Antihypertensive drugs
Antihypertensives
Antitumor activity
Antitumor agents
Biology
Cancer
Cancer therapies
Cell growth
Clinical trials
Development and progression
Diabetes
Diabetes mellitus
Disease prevention
Drug discovery
Drug resistance
Drug therapy
FDA approval
Glucose
Health aspects
Hypertension
Hypoxia
Liver cancer
Malignancy
Medical research
Metabolism
Metabolites
Metastasis
Mortality
Oncology, Experimental
Patients
Prostate
Review
Risk factors
Side effects
Tumors
Type 2 diabetes
title Repurposing of Chronically Used Drugs in Cancer Therapy: A Chance to Grasp
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