Medical College of Wisconsin
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Two birds, one stone: hesperetin alleviates chemotherapy-induced diarrhea and potentiates tumor inhibition. Oncotarget 2018 Jun 15;9(46):27958-27973

Date

07/03/2018

Pubmed ID

29963254

Pubmed Central ID

PMC6021345

DOI

10.18632/oncotarget.24563

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85048607629 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   16 Citations

Abstract

Chemotherapy-induced diarrhea (CID), with clinical high incidence, adversely affects the efficacy of cancer treatment and patients' quality of life. Our study demonstrates that the citrus flavonoid hesperetin (Hst) has a superior potential as a new agent to prevent and alleviate CID. In the animal model for irinotecan (CPT-11) induced CID, Hst could selectively inhibit intestinal carboxylesterase (CES2) and thus reduce the local conversion of CPT-11 to cytotoxic SN-38 which causes intestinal toxicity. Oral administration of Hst manifested an excellent anti-diarrhea efficacy, prohibiting 80% of severe and 100% of mild diarrhea in the CPT-11 administered tumor-bearing mice. In addition, a significant attenuation of intestinal inflammation contributed to the anti-diarrhea effect of Hst. Moreover, Hst was found to work synergistically with CPT-11 in tumor inhibition by suppressing the tumor's STAT3 activity and recruiting tumoricidal macrophages into the tumor microenvironment. The anti-intestinal inflammation and anti-STAT3 properties of Hst would contribute its broad benefits to the management of diarrhea caused by other chemo or targeted agents, and more importantly, enhance and reinforce the anti-tumor effects of these agents, to improve patient outcomes.

Author List

Yu Y, Kong R, Cao H, Yin Z, Liu J, Nan X, Phan AT, Ding T, Zhao H, Wong STC

Author

Alexandria T. Phan MD Professor in the Medicine department at Medical College of Wisconsin