A novel pipeline of 2-(benzenesulfonamide)-N-(4-hydroxyphenyl) acetamide analgesics that lack hepatotoxicity and retain antipyresis
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2020-06-17
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Elsevier
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Although acetaminophen (ApAP) is one of the most commonly used medicines worldwide, hepatotoxicity is a risk with overdose or in patients with compromised liver function. ApAP overdose is the most
common cause of acute fulminant hepatic failure. Oxidation of ApAP to N-acetyl-p-benzoquinone imine
(NAPQI) is the mechanism for hepatotoxicity. 1 is a non-hepatotoxic, metabolically unstable lipophilic
ApAP analog that is not antipyretic. The newly synthesized 3 is a non-hepatotoxic ApAP analog that is
stable, lipophilic, and retains analgesia and antipyresis. Intraperitoneal or po administration of the new
chemical entities (NCEs), 3b and 3r, in concentrations equal to a toxic dose of ApAP did not result in the
formation of NAPQI. Unlike livers from NCE-treated mice, the livers from ApAP-treated mice demonstrated large amounts of nitrotyrosine, a marker of mitochondrial free radical formation, and loss of
hepatic tight junction integrity. Given the widespread use of ApAP, hepatotoxicity risk with overuse, and
the ongoing opioid epidemic, these NCEs represent a novel, non-narcotic therapeutic pipeline.
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Bazan, H. A., Bhattacharjee, S., Burgos, C., Recio, J., Abet, V., Pahng, A. R., Jun, B., Heap, J., Ledet, A. J., Gordon, W. C., Edwards, S., Paul, D., Alvarez-Builla, J., & Bazan, N. G. (2020). A novel pipeline of 2-(benzenesulfonamide)-N-(4-hydroxyphenyl) acetamide analgesics that lack hepatotoxicity and retain antipyresis. European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 202, 112600. 10.1016/j.ejmech.2020.112600
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