Vitamin E δ-Tocotrienol Levels in Tumor and Pancreatic Tissue of Mice after Oral Administration
Author(s) -
Kazim Husain,
R François,
Sean Z. Hutchinson,
Anthony Neuger,
Richard M. Lush,
Domenico Coppola,
Saı̈d M. Sebti,
Mokenge P. Malafa
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.51
H-Index - 59
eISSN - 1423-0313
pISSN - 0031-7012
DOI - 10.1159/000190792
Subject(s) - tocotrienol , oral administration , pharmacokinetics , pancreas , pancreatic cancer , vitamin e , chemistry , endocrinology , toxicity , pharmacology , vitamin , medicine , tocopherol , cancer , antioxidant , biochemistry
Tocotrienols are natural vitamin E compounds that are known to have a neuroprotective effect at nanomolar concentration and anti-carcinogenic effect at micromolar concentration. In this report, we investigated the pharmacokinetics, tumor and pancreatic tissue levels, and toxicity of delta-tocotrienol in mice because of its anti-tumor activity against pancreatic cancer. Following a single oral administration of delta-tocotrienol at 100 mg/kg, the peak plasma concentration (C(max)) was 57 +/- 5 micromol/l, the time required to reach peak plasma concentration (T(max)) was 2 h and plasma half-life (t(1/2)) was 3.5 h. The delta-tocotrienol was cleared from plasma and liver within 24 h, but delayed from the pancreas. When mice were fed delta-tocotrienol for 6 weeks, the concentration in tumor tissue was 41 +/- 3.5 nmol/g. This concentration was observed with the oral dose (100 mg/kg) of delta-tocotrienol which inhibited tumor growth by 80% in our previous studies. Interestingly, delta-tocotrienol was 10-fold more concentrated in the pancreas than in the tumor. We observed no toxicity due to delta-tocotrienol as mice gained normal weight with no histopathological changes in tissues. Our data suggest that bioactive levels of delta-tocotrienol can be achieved in the pancreas following oral administration and supports its clinical investigation in pancreatic cancer.
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