Topical Sulindac Combined With Hydrogen Peroxide in the Treatment of Actinic Keratoses
January 2009 | Volume 8 | Issue 1 | Original Article | 29 | Copyright © January 2009
Lionel Resnick MD, Harold Rabinovitz MD, David Binninger PhD, Maria Marchetti PhD, Herbert Weissbach PhD
Abstract
Background: Actinic keratoses (AKs) are a precancerous condition of the skin that have the potential to become squamous cell
cancer (SCC). Sulindac is a Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved nonsteroidal anti-infl ammatory drug (NSAID) that has been
shown to have clinically signifi cant anticancer effects. Malignant cells may have a different response to oxidative stress than normal
cells.
Objective: To establish a role of increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the mechanism of cancer killing by sulindac in the presence of an oxidizing agent. To assess the tolerability and effi cacy of the combination of gels containing sulindac and hydrogen peroxide in the treatment of patients with AKs.
Methods: Cell culture studies were performed using a skin SCC cell line and normal human epidermal keratinocytes. After treat- ment with sulindac and an oxidizing agent, cell viability, and intracellular ROS levels were measured. An open-label clinical trial was performed using sulindac and hydrogen peroxide gels daily for 3 weeks on AKs involving the upper extremities.
Results: In SCC cells, a combination of sulindac and an oxidizing agent lead to 400 to 500% increases in intracellular ROS, which resulted in signifi cant cell death. In sharp contrast, normal keratinocytes did not show increases in ROS levels and were not killed. A clinical trial using the combination of sulindac and hydrogen peroxide therapy in 5 patients with AKs revealed that 60% of the treated AKs responded and 50% showed no residual AK on histopathology specimens after skin biopsy.
Limitations: The small number of patients and the lack of a placebo group.
Conclusion: Increased levels of ROS appear to be important in the selective killing of cancer cells in the presence of sulindac and oxidizing agents. Further studies are necessary to defi ne the role of the combination of sulindac and oxidizing agent therapy in pa- tients with AKs and skin cancer.