TY - JOUR KW - Cachexia KW - Carcinoma, Renal Cell KW - Clinical Trials as Topic KW - Erythema Nodosum KW - Graft vs Host Disease KW - Humans KW - Immunosuppressive Agents KW - Kidney Neoplasms KW - Leprosy, lepromatous KW - Multiple Myeloma KW - Sarcoma, Kaposi KW - Thalidomide KW - Ulcer AU - Joglekar S AU - Levin M AB -
Thalidomide was first used in the late 1950s but it was withdrawn from the market in the 1960s for its notorious teratogenic effects. This drug was more recently rediscovered as a powerful immunomodulatory and antiinflammatory agent and was approved by the FDA in 1998 for treatment of erythema nodosum leprosum. Thalidomide has shown great promise in advanced or refractory multiple myeloma either alone or in combination with other agents. It has also demonstrated benefits in a wide variety of disparate conditions such as aphthous and genital ulcers, cancer cachexia, HIV, tuberculosis and chronic graft versus host disease. Thalidomide is being investigated for treatment of renal cell carcinoma, and liver and thyroid cancers. Better understanding of its many mechanisms of action has provoked great interest in its potential use for treatment of various disorders. This review focuses on thalidomide's mechanisms of action, biochemistry, pharmacokinetics and its use in erythema nodosum leprosum as well as multiple myeloma, graft versus host disease, and renal cell carcinoma.
BT - Drugs of today (Barcelona, Spain : 1998) C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15148528?dopt=Abstract DA - 2004 Mar IS - 3 J2 - Drugs Today LA - eng N2 -Thalidomide was first used in the late 1950s but it was withdrawn from the market in the 1960s for its notorious teratogenic effects. This drug was more recently rediscovered as a powerful immunomodulatory and antiinflammatory agent and was approved by the FDA in 1998 for treatment of erythema nodosum leprosum. Thalidomide has shown great promise in advanced or refractory multiple myeloma either alone or in combination with other agents. It has also demonstrated benefits in a wide variety of disparate conditions such as aphthous and genital ulcers, cancer cachexia, HIV, tuberculosis and chronic graft versus host disease. Thalidomide is being investigated for treatment of renal cell carcinoma, and liver and thyroid cancers. Better understanding of its many mechanisms of action has provoked great interest in its potential use for treatment of various disorders. This review focuses on thalidomide's mechanisms of action, biochemistry, pharmacokinetics and its use in erythema nodosum leprosum as well as multiple myeloma, graft versus host disease, and renal cell carcinoma.
PY - 2004 SP - 197 EP - 204 T2 - Drugs of today (Barcelona, Spain : 1998) TI - The promise of thalidomide: evolving indications. VL - 40 SN - 1699-3993 ER -