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Grapefruit
Juice boosts Drug's Anti-Cancer effects
Newswise — In a small, early clinical trial,
researchers at the University of Chicago
Medical Center have found that combining
eight ounces of grapefruit juice with the
drug rapamycin can increase drug levels,
allowing lower doses of the drug to be
given.
They also showed that the combination can be
effective in treating various types of
cancer.
For two decades, pharmacists have pasted
DO-NOT-TAKE-WITH-GRAPEFRUIT-JUICE stickers
on various pill bottles because it can
interfere with the enzymes that break down
and eliminate certain drugs. This
interference makes the drugs more potent.
In data presented at the AACR 100th Annual
Meeting 2009, the Chicago researchers
examine ways to exploit this fruit's
medication-altering properties.
"Grapefruit juice can increase blood levels
of certain drugs three to five times," said
study director Ezra Cohen, MD, a cancer
specialist at the University of Chicago
Medical Center.
"This has always been considered a hazard.
We wanted to see if, and how much, it could
amplify the availability, and perhaps the
efficacy of rapamycin, a drug with promise
for cancer treatment."
This trial was designed to test "whether we
could use this to boost rapamycin's
bioavailability to the patient's advantage,
to determine how much the juice altered drug
levels, and to assess its impact on
anti-cancer activity and side effects," he
said.
The study followed 28 patients with advanced
solid tumors, for which there is no
effective treatment.
The dose of the drug increased with each
group of five patients, from 15 milligrams
up to 35. Patients took the drug by mouth,
as a liquid, once a week.
Beginning in week two, they washed it down
with a glass of grapefruit juice (Citius
paradisi), taken immediately after the
rapamycin and then once a day for the rest
of the week.
Twenty-five participants remained in the
study long enough to be evaluated. Seven of
those 25 (28%) had stable disease, with
little or no tumor growth.
One patient (4%) had a partial response,
with the tumor shrinking by about 30
percent. That patient is still doing well
more than a year after beginning the trial.
"My first cancer doctor gave me five years
to live," said that patient, Albina Duggan
of Bourbonnais, IL. "That time runs out next
July."
Duggan, mother of four, has a rare cancer,
an epitheliod hemangioendothelioma that
originated in the liver and subsequently
spread to two vertebrae in the neck and to
the lymph nodes.
She had surgery and radiation therapy and
was evaluated for a liver transplant, but
evidence of cancer beyond the liver made her
ineligible for a transplant.
She "shopped around" for other therapies and
was able to keep the disease in check for a
year with sorafenib, a drug approved for
kidney and liver cancers.
After a year of stable disease, however, her
tumor began growing again and she had to
look for an alternative therapy. Her doctors
at the University of Chicago offered three
clinical trials.
The most appealing to her was the rapamycin
plus grapefruit juice study. She took her
first dose March 11, 2008, and is still on
the drug-juice combination.
"My tumor is smaller and it's no longer
growing. I feel fine. I can do whatever I
like and I have no real side effects," she
said. "What's not to like?"
Trial subjects do not like the taste of
rapamycin. "It's not pleasant," Duggan
admitted. She has also tired of grapefruit
juice.
Many patients in the study did report side
effects. More than half experienced elevated
blood sugar levels, diarrhea, low white
blood cell counts or fatigue.
Duggan, more fortunate than most, has had
milder side effects, including fragile toe
and finger nails and curly hair.
"I now have very curly hair," she said,
"seriously curly. I have to adjust to it."
Rapamycin, also known as sirolimus, was
originally developed to suppress the immune
system, preventing rejection in patients
receiving a transplanted kidney.
Cancer
specialists became interested in the drug
when they learned that it disrupted a
biochemical pathway involved in the
development of the new blood vessels that
tumors need to grow.
But the drug is expensive and poorly
absorbed. Less than 15 percent of rapamycin
is absorbed when taken by mouth.
This study showed that substances known a
furanocoumarins, plentiful in some forms of
grapefruit juice, can decrease the breakdown
of rapamycin.
This makes the drug reach higher levels in
the bloodstream, two to four times the
levels seen without a juice boost, and thus
increases the amount of the drug that
reaches its targets.
"That means more of the drug hits the
target, so we need less of the drug," said
Cohen.
Many of the newer cancer medications,
precisely focused on specific targets, are
now taken as pills rather than
intravenously.
Some of these drugs, including rapamycin,
can cost thousands of dollars a month.
Hence, "this is an opportunity for real
savings," Cohen said. "A daily glass of
juice could lower the cost by 50 percent."
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