Curcumin Innovative Delivery Forms: Paving the ‘Yellow Brick Road’ of Antitumoral Phytotherapy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Curcumin Overview
1.2. The Chemistry of Curcumin
2. Biological Actions of Curcumin
2.1. Medicinal Activity in Humans
2.1.1. Curcumin against Inflammation and Oxidative Stress
2.1.2. Antitumoral Action
- In colorectal cancer, curcumin was studied for both tumor prevention and chemotherapy. In cancer prevention, it was demonstrated to reduce by 40% the formation of aberrant crypt foci in smoking patients (intake of 4 g/day for one month) [63]. In a combination study, curcumin, and quercetin (1440 + 60 mg/day for six months) were shown to reduce the number and size of polyps in patients with familial adenomatous polyposis, a hereditary disorder characterized by the development of hundreds of colorectal adenomas which turn malign when left untreated [64]. In chemotherapy, 1 g/day curcumin for up to one month (prior to surgical removal of the tumor) was shown to improve the patient’s body weight and to increase the apoptosis rates of the patient’s tumor cells [65].
- In prostate cancer, a trial has demonstrated that curcumin/flavone association reduces the chances of developing cancer by lowering the levels of prostate-specific antigen (PSA). PSA levels are increased due to the presence of chronic inflammation in the prostate, which is one of the most significant causes of tumorigenesis [66]. Association of curcumin (5.4 g/day for seven days around chemotherapy) with docetaxel/prednisone (75 mg/m2 + 24 mg, once every three weeks, for six cycles) demonstrated encouraging results, with a tumor objective response in 40% and a PSA response in 59% of the patients in a group having castration-resistant prostate cancer [67]. There is also preliminary evidence on the ability to reduce the formation of metastases. An association of polyphenols (pomegranate seed, green tea, broccoli, and turmeric), taken over six months, has lowered PSA by 63.8% (compared to placebo) in prostatectomized patients [68]. Note that, since these men have no prostate, PSA is produced only by neoplastic cells, thus being a good indicator of metastasis growth. Curcumin can confer radioprotective effect in patients with prostate cancer who undergo radiation therapy, reducing the severity of radiotherapy related urinary symptoms. Patients were given 3 g of curcuminoids per day (corresponding to ca. 2 g/day of curcumin) for one week before the onset of radiotherapy and until completion of radiotherapy [69,70].
- In breast cancer, curcumin was used in co-therapy with both chemotherapeutic agents and radiation. A combination therapy with docetaxel and curcumin (in escalating doses of up to 6 g/day) was found to afford better therapeutic results than docetaxel used alone: histological improvements were observed in the fourteen patients under study, all having reduction or elimination of disseminated foci [71]. Curcumin was evaluated in two clinical trials regarding protective action against radiation-induced dermatitis during radiotherapy of breast cancer patients. Despite promising results on a pilot study, with slightly less severe dermatitis in the curcumin group, a second trial on 686 patients showed no significant changes in pain, symptoms, and quality of life of the patients taking curcumin (1.5 g daily) in regard to those taking placebo [72].
- Pancreatic cancer, in the advanced stage, is a condition with very poor prognosis. In a phase II study with twenty-one patients taking curcumin (8 g/day for up to 18 months), partial regression was observed during the treatment period; after treatment, patient responses varied, one of them having become stable and another having shown a strong tumor response [73]. Another trial evaluated the association of curcuminoids (8 g/day, corresponding to 6.14 g/day of curcumin) with a gemcitabine-based chemotherapeutic treatment. A total of 21 patients was divided into two groups: one, with 2 patients, received gemcitabine monotherapy; the other, with 19 patients, received a combination therapy of gemcitabine and S-1. S-1 is a novel oral antitumor formula based on fluorouracil, comprising three pharmacological agents: (i) tegafur, a prodrug of 5-fluorouracil, (ii) 5-chloro-2,4-dihydroxypyridine, which inhibits dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase activity; and (iii) potassium oxonate, which reduces gastrointestinal toxicity was also evaluated. Eighty-one percent of the patients died during the study period. In the surviving patients, the treatment was able to stabilize the disease [74].
2.2. Molecular Targets of Curcumin
2.2.1. Curcumin Modulates the Activity of Transcription Factors
- the families of the nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-kB) and of the activated protein-1 (AP-1),
- signal transducers and activators of transcription (STAT), and
- steroid receptors [77].
Family | Molecular Target | Effect | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
Transcription factors | NF-kB | ↓ | [78,79,80,88,95] |
Nrf2 | ↑ | [96] | |
AP-1 | ↓ | [83,84,85,86,87,88] | |
STAT-3 | ↓ | [97,98] | |
STAT-5 | ↓ | [99,100] | |
β-catenin | ↓ | [101,102] | |
EGR-1 | ↓ | [103,104] | |
HIF-1 | ↓ | [105] | |
Notch-1 | ↓ | [106] | |
Growth factors | EGF | ↓ | [107] |
FGF | ↓ | [108] | |
PDGF | ↓ | [109] | |
TGF-β | ↓ | [110,111,112,113,114] | |
VEGF | ↓ | [115,116,117] | |
Cytokines, pro-inflammatory | TNF-α | ↓ | [95,118,119,120] |
IL-1 | ↓ | [121] | |
IL-2 | ↓ | [122] | |
IL-5 | ↓ | [123] | |
IL-6 | ↓ | [118] | |
IL-8 | ↓ | [121] | |
IL-12 | ↓ | [124] | |
IL-18 | ↓ | [125] | |
Enzymes | COX-2 | ↓ | [72,80,126,127] |
iNOS | ↓ | [127] | |
Lipoxygenase | ↓ | [128] | |
MMP-9 | ↓ | [78,129,130,131] | |
Kinases | JNK | ↑ | [132] |
MAPK | ↓ | [133] | |
PKC | ↓ | [131] | |
Akt | ↓ | [134] | |
CDKs | ↓ | [135] | |
Receptors | AR | ↓ | [86] |
EGFR | ↓ | [79,119] | |
Adhesion molecules | ICAM-1 | ↓ | [95] |
VCAM-1 | ↓ | [95] | |
ELAM-1 | ↓ | [95] | |
Antiapoptotic proteins | Bcl-2 | ↓ | [136,137,138,139,140] |
Bcl-xL | ↓ | [136,137,138,141] | |
Proapoptotic proteins | Bax | ↑ | [136,137,138,139,140] |
Bak | ↑ | [140] | |
Others | Cyclin D1 | ↓ | [142,143] |
p53 | ↑ | [144,145] |
2.2.2. Curcumin Decreases Tumor Angiogenesis
2.2.3. Curcumin Inhibits Inflammatory Cytokines
2.2.4. Curcumin Regulates the Activity of Enzymes with Roles in Inflammation and Cancer
2.2.5. Curcumin and Cell Cycle Regulation
3. Pharmacokinetics and Bioavailability of Curcumin from Different Administration Routes
3.1. Oral Administration
Daily Dose | Cmax Mean ± S.D. (nM) | Tmax (h) | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
0.18 g | n.d. a | — | [150] |
3.6 g | 11.1 ± 0.6 | 1 | [152] |
4.0 g | 510 ± 110 | 1.67 | [153] |
6.0 g | 640 ± 60 | 2 | [153] |
8.0 g | 1770 ± 1870 b | 1.75 | [153] |
10.0 g | 138 c | 4 | [154] |
12.0 g | 157 c | 2 | [154] |
0.03 g/kg | 4.9 ± 7.6 | 6 | [151] |
2.0 g/kg | 16.3 ± 13.5 | 1 | [157] |
3.2. Parenteral Administration
4. Innovative Curcumin Formulations and High-Performance Delivery Forms
4.1. Oral Delivery Forms
4.1.1. Marketed Products
Trade Name | Formulation Strategy | Dosage Form | Product Composition | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
CurcuminRich | Colloidal NP w/curcuminoids (theracurmin) | 30 mg capsules | Theracurmin: polysacharide NPs loaded with curcuminoids Excipients: MCC, magnesium stearate, silica | [151] |
Biocurcumax | Curcuminoids w/turmeric essential oil | 350 mg capsules | Curcuminoids (titrated 95% curcumin) Excipients: Maltodextrin, magnesium stearate, HPMC | [164] |
Biomor | Curcuminoids w/turmeric essential oil | 500 mg capsules | Curcuminoids (titrated 95% curcumin) in a vegetable capsule | [14] |
Cavacurmin | Cyclodextrin inclusion complex w/curcumin | Dry powder | Cavacurmin: curcumin, γ-cyclodextrin | [179] |
Meriva | Liposome | 500 mg capsules (100 mg curcumin) | Liposome: Turmeric root extract, phosphatidylcholine, phospholipids Excipients: HPMC, leucine, silicon dioxide and MCC | [165] |
Liposomal curcumin mango | Liposome | Liquid, 20 g/L | Liposome: curcumin, phospholipids from sunflower Excipients: water, xylitol, mango aroma, ascorbic acid, Preservative: seabuckthorn extract | [177] |
Liposomal curcumin | Liposome | Liquid, 41.7 g/L | Liposome: Turmetic root extract, phospholipids from sunflower Excipients: water, glucosylsteviosides, flavors, glycerin, xanthan/acacia gums Preservative: potassium sorbate | [178] |
Dr. Mercola Curcumin Advanced | Micronized curcuminoids (microactive) | 500 mg capsules | Micronized curcumin Excipients: HPMC, MCC, polyglycerol oleate, silicon dioxide, metolose, medium chain triglycerides and sodium alginate | [167] |
Curcumin C3 Complex | Combined therapy of curcuminoids & piperidine | 500 + 5 mg capsules | Complex: Turmeric root extract (73% curcumin), piperine Excipients: rice flour, cellulose and ascorbyl palmitate | [166,168] |
4.1.2. Emerging Solutions for Oral Delivery
4.1.3. Buccal Delivery
4.2. New Injectable forms of Curcumin
4.3. Inhalable Curcumin Formulations
4.3.1. Dry Powder Inhaler for Pulmonary Delivery
4.3.2. Intranasal Aerosol for Delivery to the Brain
4.4. Transdermal Administration
4.4.1. Curcumin Topical Formulations with Liposomes, Microemulsions, and Polymeric Nanoparticles
4.4.2. Dermal Compositions Containing Silver and Curcumin for Combined Therapy
4.4.3. Iontophoresis Techniques
4.4.4. Photodynamic Therapy for Increased Antitumoral Action on Skin
4.5. Curcumin Prodrugs and Metal Complexes
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Carvalho Henriques, M.; Faustino, M.A.F.; Santos Braga, S. Curcumin Innovative Delivery Forms: Paving the ‘Yellow Brick Road’ of Antitumoral Phytotherapy. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 8990. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10248990
Carvalho Henriques M, Faustino MAF, Santos Braga S. Curcumin Innovative Delivery Forms: Paving the ‘Yellow Brick Road’ of Antitumoral Phytotherapy. Applied Sciences. 2020; 10(24):8990. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10248990
Chicago/Turabian StyleCarvalho Henriques, Magda, Maria Amparo F. Faustino, and Susana Santos Braga. 2020. "Curcumin Innovative Delivery Forms: Paving the ‘Yellow Brick Road’ of Antitumoral Phytotherapy" Applied Sciences 10, no. 24: 8990. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10248990
APA StyleCarvalho Henriques, M., Faustino, M. A. F., & Santos Braga, S. (2020). Curcumin Innovative Delivery Forms: Paving the ‘Yellow Brick Road’ of Antitumoral Phytotherapy. Applied Sciences, 10(24), 8990. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10248990