Affiliation:
1. Chitkara College of Pharmacy, Chitkara University, Punjab Campus, Chandigarh - Patiala National Highway, NH-64 Distt. Patiala -
140401(Punjab), India
Abstract
Background:
The side effects of ionising radiation include skin changes, dry mouth, hair loss, low blood
count, and the mutagenic effect on normal cells when utilized in radiotherapy for cancer treatment. These radiations
can cause damage to the cell membrane, lipids, proteins, and DNA and generate free radicals. Evidence reports stated
that radiotherapy accounts for 17-19% of secondary malignancies, labelling this treatment option a double-edged
sword.
Objective:
Radioprotective molecules are used for mitigating radiotherapy's side effects. These agents show free radical
scavenging, antioxidant, collagen synthesis inhibition, protease inhibition, immune stimulation, increased cytokine
production, electron transfer, and toxicity reduction properties. The most frequently used amifostine has an array of
cancer applications, showing multitarget action as nephroprotective to cisplatin and reducing the chances of xerostomia.
Many other agents, such as metformin, edaravone, mercaptopropionylglycine, in specific diseases, such as diabetes,
cerebral infarction, cystinuria, have shown radioprotective action. This article will discuss potentially repurposed
radioprotectors that can be used in the clinical setting, along with a brief discussion on specific synthetic agents like
amifostine and PrC-210.
Methods:
Rigorous literature search using various electronic databases, such as PubMed, ScienceDirect, Scopus,
EMBASE, Bentham Science, Cochrane Library, etc., was made. Peer-review research and review papers were selected,
studied, reviewed, and analysed.
Conclusion:
Safety and risk-free treatment can be guaranteed with the repurposed agents. Agents like metformin,
captopril, nifedipine, simvastatin, and various others have shown potent radioprotective action in various studies. This
review compiled repurposed synthetic radioprotective agents.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Cancer Research,Pharmacology,Molecular Medicine