4 resultados para Polycystic kidneys
em Doria (National Library of Finland DSpace Services) - National Library of Finland, Finland
Resumo:
Artikkeli on osa Hertta Pulkkisen syventävien opintojen projektityötä
Resumo:
Hormone-dependent diseases, e.g. cancers, rank high in mortality in the modern world, and thus, there is an urgent need for new drugs to treat these diseases. Although the diseases are clearly hormone-dependent, changes in circulating hormone concentrations do not explain all the pathological processes observed in the diseased tissues. A more inclusive explanation is provided by intracrinology – a regulation of hormone concentrations at the target tissue level. This is mediated by the expression of a pattern of steroid-activating and -inactivating enzymes in steroid target tissues, thus enabling a concentration gradient between the blood circulation and the tissue. Hydroxysteroid (17beta) dehydrogenases (HSD17Bs) form a family of enzymes that catalyze the conversion between low active 17-ketosteroids and highly active 17beta-hydroxysteroids. HSD17B1 converts low active estrogen (E1) to highly active estradiol (E2) with high catalytic efficiency, and altered HSD17B1 expression has been associated with several hormone-dependent diseases, including breast cancer, endometriosis, endometrial hyperplasia and cancer, and ovarian epithelial cancer. Because of its putative role in E2 biosynthesis in ovaries and peripheral target tissues, HSD17B1 is considered to be a promising drug target for estrogen-dependent diseases. A few studies have indicated that the enzyme also has androgenic activity, but they have been ignored. In the present study, transgenic mice overexpressing human HSD17B1 (HSD17B1TG mice) were used to study the effects of the enzyme in vivo. Firstly, the substrate specificity of human HSD17B1 was determined in vivo. The results indicated that human HSD17B1 has significant androgenic activity in female mice in vivo, which resulted in increased fetal testosterone concentration and female disorder of sexual development appearing as masculinized phenotype (increased anogenital distance, lack of nipples, lack of vaginal opening, combination of vagina with urethra, enlarged Wolffian duct remnants in the mesovarium and enlarged female prostate). Fetal androgen exposure has been linked to polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and metabolic syndrome during adulthood in experimental animals and humans, but the genes involved in PCOS are largely unknown. A putative mechanism to accumulate androgens during fetal life by HSD17B1 overexpression was shown in the present study. Furthermore, as a result of prenatal androgen exposure locally in the ovaries, HSD17B1TG females developed ovarian benign serous cystadenomas in adulthood. These benign lesions are precursors of low-grade ovarian serous tumors. Ovarian cancer ranks fifth in mortality of all female cancers in Finland, and most of the ovarian cancers arise from the surface epithelium. The formation of the lesions was prevented by prenatal antiandrogen treatment and by transplanting wild type (WT) ovaries prepubertally into HSD17B1TG females. The results obtained in our non-clinical TG mouse model, together with a literature analysis, suggest that HSD17B1 has a role in ovarian epithelial carcinogenesis, and especially in the development of serous tumors. The role of androgens in ovarian carcinogenesis is considered controversial, but the present study provides further evidence for the androgen hypothesis. Moreover, it directly links HSD17B1-induced prenatal androgen exposure to ovarian epithelial carcinogenesis in mice. As expected, significant estrogenic activity was also detected for human HSD17B1. HSD17B1TG mice had enhanced peripheral conversion of E1 to E2 in a variety of target tissues, including the uterus. Furthermore, this activity was significantly decreased by treatments with specific HSD17B1 inhibitors. As a result, several estrogen-dependent disorders were found in HSD17B1TG females. Here we report that HSD17B1TG mice invariably developed endometrial hyperplasia and failed to ovulate in adulthood. As in humans, endometrial hyperplasia in HSD17B1TG females was reversible upon ovulation induction, triggering a rise in circulating progesterone levels, and in response to exogenous progestins. Remarkably, treatment with a HSD17B1 inhibitor failed to restore ovulation, yet completely reversed the hyperplastic morphology of epithelial cells in the glandular compartment. We also demonstrate that HSD17B1 is expressed in normal human endometrium, hyperplasia, and cancer. Collectively, our non-clinical data and literature analysis suggest that HSD17B1 inhibition could be one of several possible approaches to decrease endometrial estrogen production in endometrial hyperplasia and cancer. HSD17B1 expression has been found in bones of humans and rats. The non-clinical data in the present study suggest that human HSD17B1 is likely to have an important role in the regulation of bone formation, strength and length during reproductive years in female mice. Bone density in HSD17B1TG females was highly increased in femurs, but in lesser amounts also in tibias. Especially the tibia growth plate, but not other regions of bone, was susceptible to respond to HSD17B1 inhibition by increasing bone length, whereas the inhibitors did not affect bone density. Therefore, HSD17B1 inhibitors could be safer than aromatase inhibitors in regard to bone in the treatment of breast cancer and endometriosis. Furthermore, diseases related to improper growth, are a promising new indication for HSD17B1 inhibitors.
Resumo:
The proportion of elderly people over 65 years of age in Finland is expected to grow to over 25% by the 2025. It has been estimated that elderly people today consume nearly 40% of all drugs. Age brings about number of physiological changes that may affect the disposition, metabolism and excretion of drugs. The function of heart, lungs, liver and kidneys decreases even in healthy people, as they get older. The proportion of total body water decreases and the relative fat percentage increases. Also several other factors such as concurrent diseases, concomitant medication and nutritional factors have an effect on drug therapy in elderly. Age increases the risk of adverse drug reactions, which most often are dose-dependent. Despite all this there are not enough studies involving the elderly people and the elderly are most often excluded from clinical trials. Oxycodone is a strong opioid analgesic, which is used to treat moderate or severe pain. Paracetamol is a widely used nonopioid analgesic, which has become popular in the treatment of pain in many patient groups. In this series of studies the pharmacokinetics of oral and intravenous oxicodone as well as intravenous paracetamol in the elderly and young adult patients were investigated. Also a study investigating the interaction of oral antibiotic clarityhromycin, a known cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A4 inhibitor, with oxycodone pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics in elderly and young healthy volunteers was carried out. The pharmacokinetics of oxycodone showed a clear age depency. Patients over 70 years had 50-80% higher mean exposure to oral oxycodone and a twofold greater plasma concentration than young adults 12 h after ingestion of the drug. Elderly patients had 40-80% greater exposure to intravenous oxycodone and patients over 80 years had over twofold greater plasma concentrations 8 h post dose than the young adults. The elderly patients had also greater exposure to intra venous paracetamol compared to young adults. Clarithromycin increased the exposure to oral oxycodone in both young and elderly volunteers. The elderly had marked interindividual variation in the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics when clarithromycin was given concomitantly with oxycodone. Because the pharmacokinetics of oxycodone and intravenous paracetamol depend on the age of the subject, it is important to titrate the analgesic dose individually in the elderly.
Resumo:
The human body eliminates foreign compounds primarily by metabolizing them to hydrophilic forms to facilitate effective excretion through the kidneys. Cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes in the liver and intestine contribute to the metabolism of many drugs. Pharmacokinetic drugdrug interactions occur if the activity of CYPs are inhibited or induced by another drug. Prescribing multiple drugs to the improve effectiveness of therapy or to treat coexisting diseases is a common practice in clinical medicine. Polypharmacy predisposes patients to adverse effects because of the profound unpredictability in CYP enzymatic-mediated drug metabolism. S-ketamine is a phencyclidine derivative which functions as an antagonist of the N-methyl-Daspartate (NMDA) receptor in the central nervous system. It is a unique anaesthetic producing “dissociative anaesthesia” in high doses and analgesia in low doses. Studies with human liver microsomes suggest that ketamine is metabolized primarily via CYP3A4 and CYP2B6 enzymes. In this thesis, in healthy volunteers, randomized and controlled cross-over studies were conducted to investigate the effects of different CYP inducers and inhibitors on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of oral and intravenous S-ketamine. The plasma concentrations of ketamine and its metabolite, norketamine, were determined at different timepoints over a 24 hour period. Other pharmacodynamic variables were examined for 12 hours. Results of these studies showed that the inhibition of the CYP3A4 pathway by clarithromycin or grapefruit juice increased the exposure to oral S-ketamine by 2.6- and 3.0-fold. Unexpectedly, CYP3A4 inhibition by itraconazole caused no significant alterations in the plasma concentrations of oral S-ketamine. CYP3A4 induction by St. John´s wort or rifampicin decreased profoundly the concentrations of oral S-ketamine. However, after rifampicin, there were no significant differences in the plasma concentrations of S-ketamine when it was administered intravenously. This demonstrated that rifampicin inhibited the metabolism of Sketamine at the intestinal level. When CYP2B6 was inhibited by ticlopidine, there was a 2.4- fold increase in the exposure of S-ketamine. These studies demonstrated that low dose oral Sketamine is metabolized both via CYP3A4 and CYP2B6 pathways. The concomitant use of drugs that affect CYP3A4 or CYP2B6, during oral S-ketamine treatment, may cause clinically significant drug-drug interactions.