Some cancers survive on high cholesterol levels. New research uses antipsychotic drugs to “starve” these cancer cells of cholesterol.
Some studies have shown that certain malignancies depend on cholesterol to survive, and that high serum cholesterol levels can predict the risk of cancer.
Moreover, a drug compound called leelaminehas been shown in recent studies to delay tumor growth in melanoma, which is a dangerous form of skin cancer.
Based on this research, scientists at the Pennsylvania State (Penn State) University Cancer Institute in Hershey — led by Omer Kuzu, a postdoctoral fellow in pharmacology — set out to stop the movement of cholesterol within treatment-resistant cancer cells.
To do so, they turned to a class of drugs called functional inhibitors of acid sphingomyelinase (FIASMAs). Specifically, they tested 42 FIASMAs that were either antipsychotics or antidepressantsand compared their effects with those of leelamine.
The findings were published in the British Journal of Cancer.
Using nanoparticles to deliver perphenazine
Kuzu and colleagues tested the drugs first in cell cultures, and then in mouse models of melanoma.
Of all the 42 drugs tested, perphenazine and fluphenazine were found to be just as effective as leelamine at killing cancer cells.
Then, the researchers administered these drugs orally to mice. They monitored the size and weight of the rodents’ tumors.
Perphenazine reduced the size and weight of the malignancies, but only in high doses. Such a dosage made the rodents sleepy.
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