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The efficacy of astragalus membranaceous tincture at maintaining the circulating leucocyte and absolute neutrophil counts of breast cancer patients undergoing chemotherapeutic treatmentMinnaar, Carrie-Anne 08 April 2010 (has links)
M. Tech. / AIM: To determine the efficacy of Astragalus membranaceous tincture at maintaining the circulating white blood cell count (WBC) and absolute neutrophil count (ANC) of breast cancer patients receiving chemotherapy. METHODS: This is an open-label study with an active control group. Both the study and control group consisted of fifteen participants. The participants in the study group each received ten millilitres of Astragalus membranaceous 1:2 tincture daily for the duration of their course of chemotherapy. RESULTS: The overall decrease in the WBC and ANC in the control was 4.9 and 3.13 parts per billion per litre, respectively. The study group showed an overall decrease of 2.7 and 1.9 parts per billion per litre, respectively. The average overall reduction in chemotherapy dose was 4.79 percent in the study group and 20.21 percent in the control. In all of the analyses p > 0.05. The small sample size, poor patient compliance and skewed distribution of the variables hindered the reliability of the results. CONCLUSION: The positive effects observed in the study group cannot be extrapolated to the entire population, however further research is strongly motivated.
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Structure-activity relationship of titanocene complexes with antitumor propertiesBrink, Susanna 05 September 2005 (has links)
Please read the abstract in the section 00front of this document / Thesis (PhD (Chemistry))--University of Pretoria, 2006. / Chemistry / unrestricted
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Advances in platinum-amine chemotherapeutic agents : their chemistry and applicationcJaganath, Yatish January 2009 (has links)
The research conducted in this study focussed on advancing the knowledge database of diamineplatinum complexes on two frontiers: 1) the development of novel anticancer complexes, and 2) improvements in their synthetic chemistry. Novel square-planar dichloro and oxalato platinum(II) complexes were synthesized as potential anticancer agents in accordance with a comprehensive set of factors identified as being significant in optimizing such action. The nonleaving ligands consisted of asymmetric chelating chiral diamines of the form 1- (1-R-imidazol-2yl)(R')methanamine (R representing methyl, butyl and R' methyl, phenyl). The complexes were characterized by a host of spectral, thermal and crystallographic techniques. In addition, the stabilities of the complexes were monitored in aqueous and saline solutions. Cytotoxicity screening on three cultured cancer cell lines (MCF-7, HeLa and HT29) indicated the compounds, present as their respective racemates, to have rather modest activities relative to cisplatin; with complexes having the smallest substituents, R,R' = methyl, being most active. In recognition of the limitations of traditional silver-based syntheses of oxalatoplatinum(II) complexes, innovative non-silver methods were developed using the well known cancer drug, oxaliplatin, (trans-R,R-1,2- diaminocyclohexane)oxalatoplatinum(II), as a prototype. These involved direct ligand exchange reactions of the dichloro precursor, (trans-R,R-1,2- diaminocyclohexane)dichloroplatinum(II), with tetrabutylammonium oxalate in essentially non-aqueous solvents. A 90:10 mixture of isoamyl alcohol (3-methyl- 1-butanol):water, proved to be a promising solvent, enabling the recovery of pure oxaliplatin (~98 percent) after 9 hours at 88 °C in yields of up to 86 percent. In light of the perceived unique mode of anticancer action available to mononitroplatinum(IV) complexes (i.e. their STAT3-binding potential), octahedral diamineoxalatoplatinum(IV) complexes containing axially-coordinated nitro and halo co-ligands were synthesized and extensively characterized. Electrochemical studies revealed trends in reduction potential which could be correlated to structural / chemical traits of the coordinated diamine and axial ligands. The similarities of the determined cytotoxicities of the platinum(IV) compounds and their respective platinum(II) analogues, implicated reduction as a means of activation of the platinum(IV) complexes.
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Determining the anti-cancer properties of Zinc and Novel quinoxaline derivatives on lung cancer cellsSibiya, Mixo Aunny January 2020 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc. (Biochemistry)) -- University of Limpopo, 2020 / Despite major advancements in the development of various chemotherapuetic agents,
treatment for lung cancer remains costly, ineffective, toxic to neighbouring normal noncancerous cells and still hampered by high level of remissions (Wistuba et al., 2018;
Tana et al., 2016; Schiller et al., 2002). Synthesis of novel quinoxalines with a wide
spectrum of biological activities has recently received considerable attention with
promising anticancer drug activity since most of them do not affect non-cancerous
cells and are derived from readily available less costly raw materials (Srivastava et al.,
2014). Since combination treatment has been shown to augment and improve single
drug treatment, trace elements were employed in this study in combination with
quinoxalines derivatives (Gomez et al., 2016; Kocdor et al., 2015; Ku et al., 2012; John
et al., 2010; Killile and Killilea, 2007). Zinc is an essential element that is integral to
many proteins and transcription factors which regulate key cellular functions such as
the response to oxidative stress, DNA replication, DNA damage repair, cell cycle
progression, and apoptosis (Dhawan and Chadha, 2010). Owing to the importance of
these two approaches, the aim of this study was to provide in vitro preliminary
anticancer activity data on A549 lung cancer cells using combination of zinc and
quinoxaline derivatives. An assessment of the quinoxaline derivatives ferric reducing
power and DPPH free radical scavenging activity was performed. The cytotoxic and
anti-proliferation activity of these derivatives and zinc on cancer cell lines was
determined using the MTT assay. The ability of the quinoxaline derivatives and zinc to
modulate oxidative stress was evaluated using the H2DCFDA fluorescence assay. Cell
cycle arrest stages were analysed by flow cytometry through propidium iodide cell
cycle analyses. The ability of the quinoxaline derivatives to induce apoptosis in cancer
cells was assessed using DAPI/PI, Acridine Orange/Ethidium Bromide (AO/EB) and
Annexin V-FITC/Dead Cell assays. Western blot was used to investigate the Bcl/Bax
expression ratios in A549 lung cancer cells after treatment with quinoxaline
derivatives, zinc and in combination.
Of the four quinoxaline derivatives tested, 3-(quinoxaline-3-yl) prop-2-ynyl
methanosulphate (LA-39B) and 3-(quinoxaline-3-yl) prop-2-yn-1-ol (LA-55) produced
significant anticancer properties against A549 lung cancer cells at minimal
concentrations of 25μM. Both quinoxaline derivatives displayed antioxidant properties
and did not induce cell death in non-cancerous Raw 267.4 macrophage cells.
Cytotoxicity was observed in A549 lung cancer, HeLa cervical cancer and MCF-7
breast cancer cells albeit inhibition was more pronounced in A549 lung cancer cells.
Treatment of cancer cells with zinc also resulted in pronounced cytotoxicity at a
minimal concentration of 25μM. Although reduced oxidative stress was observed in
Raw 264.7 macrophages, in A549 lung cancer cells both compounds were able to
increase ROS production which was accompanied by high levels of apoptosis when
treated with derivatives and zinc alone but when in combination an improved higher
level of apoptosis is observed. The improved anti-cancer activity of this drug
combination treatment was further accompanied by lower Bcl/Bax expression ratios
with upregulation of Bax in A549 lung cancer cells. The results of the study suggest
that 3-(quinoxaline-3-yl) prop-2-ynyl methanosulphate and 3-(quinoxaline-3-yl) prop-
2-yn-1-ol are potential candidates drug for treatment of lung cancer. The use of these
quinoxaline derivatives in combination with zinc can offer alternative treatment options
for lung cancer.
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Cell-type and stimulus-dependent activation of p53 pathway in response to cytotoxic chemotherapeuticsYang, Ruizhen 15 August 2019 (has links)
Studies of drug resistance mostly characterize genetic mutations, and we know much less about the phenotypic mechanisms of drug resistance, especially at a quantitative level. p53 is an important mediator that regulates the cellular response to chemotherapy, but even cancer cells with wild-type p53 exhibited variable drug sensitivity for unclear reasons. In this PhD thesis, I investigated the mechanistic basis underlying differential p53 pathway activation in response to two types of chemotherapeutics, i.e., etoposide (a DNA-damaging drug) and 5-fluorouracil (5-FU, an antimetabolites), which led to distinct cell fate outcome in drug sensitive vs. resistant cancer cells. Specifically, I uncovered a new resistance mechanism to etoposide through bimodal modulation of p53 activation dynamics and characterized a four-component regulatory module, involving ATM, p53, Mdm2 and Wip1, which generates bimodal p53 dynamics through coupled feed-forward and feedback loops. Moreover, I found that the inhibitory strength between ATM and Mdm2 determined the differential modular output between drug sensitive and resistant cancer cell lines, and that combinatorial inhibition of Mdm2 and Wip1 was an effective strategy to alter p53 dynamics in resistant cancer cells and sensitize their apoptotic response, pointing to p53 pulsing as a potentially druggable mechanism that mediates resistance to DNA damaging chemotherapy. As for response to 5-FU, preliminary results illustrated that 5-FU activated p53 and differential cell fate outcome via ribosomal stress, rather than DNA damage. Different from dose response to etoposide, 5-FU-induced p53 activity was not only regulated by p53 induction level but also p53 phosphorylation by kinases, such as DNA-PK. Overall, this thesis presented original results that elucidated phenotypic mechanism of chemoresistance and provide new angles towards developing more effective combinatorial anticancer therapy.
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Evaluation of methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase for targeted therapeutics in cancerPereira, Perpetual A. January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Identification and characterization of a novel mechanism of multidrug resistance in tumour cellsWang, Ying, 1958- January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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The use of tetrahydrocannabinol (marinol) in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapySacks, Nancy 13 October 2010 (has links)
The effect of Marinol, which contains the antiemetic tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), was evaluated in five cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy. Subjects rated their nausea and vomiting, food intake, appetite and mood status three times daily. Drug therapy (THC) or no drug was administered for an average of four months during the course of their chemotherapy regimen. Subjects began taking THC the first day of chemotherapy and continued (5mg/three times a day) for an average of two weeks. Subjects reported their nausea and vomiting to be increased while receiving THC which coincided with their period of chemotherapy treatment. Subjective ratings for food intake and appetite varied in each case and did not always correlate with actual caloric intake from food. Food intake in most subjects was approximately the same, or greater with THC even though the period when THC was given coincided with chemotherapy treatment, and the use of emetigenic drugs. This resulted in weight maintenance or minor weight loss in most subjects. The absence of THC during chemotherapy treatment resulted in decreased food intake. Some of the moods reported most frequently by subjects while receiving THC were activity, interaction, and relaxation. Depression, social withdrawal, and anxiety were reported less frequently and usually occurred around the time of chemotherapy. The majority of the moods reported indicated that subjects had positive feelings associated with THC therapy.
The results of this study indicated that THC benefitted cancer patients by increasing food intake during chemotherapy regimens without causing adverse behavioral changes. / Master of Science
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Anticancer effects of hexamethylene bisacetamide on human colon carcinoma cells in vitro張子臣, Zhang, Zichen. January 1999 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Anatomy / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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A study of proteoglycan production during suppressed cell proliferation of a human colon carcinoma cell lineLiao, Ximan., 廖喜漫. January 1999 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Biochemistry / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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