Carica papaya leaf extract / antiOx Cancer Research Results

CPLE, Carica papaya leaf extract: Click to Expand ⟱
Features:
Papaya leaf extract is a multi-component botanical:
| Constituent group               | Examples                                          | Likely relevance                                                                                                   |
| ------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Alkaloids                       | Carpaine / carpaine-like alkaloids                | Often linked to platelet-support effects and general bioactivity                                                   |
| Flavonoids                      | Quercetin, kaempferol, rutin-like flavonoids      | Antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, possible platelet/endothelial effects                                              |
| Phenolics                       | Chlorogenic/caffeic-type phenolics,   polyphenols | Antioxidant and inflammatory modulation                                                                            |
| Proteolytic enzymes             | Papain, chymopapain                               | More relevant to latex/fruit than standardized leaf anticancer mechanisms; may contribute depending on preparation |
| Glycosides / saponins / tannins | Variable by extract                               | General botanical activity; not cleanly mechanism-defining                                                    |

Carica papaya leaf extract — Carica papaya leaf extract (CPLE) is a multi-component botanical extract from the leaves of Carica papaya, functionally distinct from papain and papaya fruit preparations. It is best classified as a supportive-care botanical / thrombopoietic adjunct rather than a direct anticancer drug. Standard abbreviations include CPLE, papaya leaf extract, papaya leaf juice, and C. papaya leaf extract. The main active identity is not one purified compound; the most relevant constituent groups are carpaine-type alkaloids and flavonoids such as quercetin, kaempferol, and related polyphenols. In oncology, the strongest rationale is chemotherapy-induced thrombocytopenia support, while direct anticancer claims remain mostly preclinical and concentration-limited.

Primary mechanisms (ranked):

  1. Platelet recovery support through megakaryopoiesis and thrombopoietic signaling, including reported CD110 / thrombopoietin-receptor related effects.
  2. Platelet preservation and membrane stabilization, with reduced platelet destruction or aggregation under inflammatory / viral thrombocytopenic conditions.
  3. Anti-inflammatory and endothelial-protective modulation relevant to thrombocytopenic illness and chemotherapy-stressed host tissue.
  4. Antioxidant / redox modulation from flavonoids and phenolics, with ROS suppression in normal or inflamed tissue as a supportive rather than primary anticancer mechanism.
  5. Direct antiproliferative and apoptosis-inducing activity in cancer cells at high extract concentrations, mainly preclinical and not yet clinically validated.
  6. Secondary NF-κB, cytokine, and immune-axis modulation, context-dependent and not sufficiently standardized across extract types.

Bioavailability / PK relevance: CPLE is an orally administered complex extract rather than a single pharmacokinetic entity. Human oncology data use whole extract dosing and platelet-count endpoints rather than validated plasma targets for carpaine, quercetin, or other marker compounds. Standardization is therefore a major translational constraint; carpaine-type alkaloids and total flavonoids are plausible quality-control markers, but the active clinical signature is extract-dependent.

In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Direct anticancer in-vitro studies often use high crude-extract concentrations in the hundreds to thousands of µg/mL range, which should not be assumed achievable systemically after oral use. The clinically relevant platelet effect is not easily concentration-mapped to cancer-cell cytotoxicity because it likely depends on host hematopoietic, inflammatory, and platelet-survival biology rather than direct tumor exposure.

Clinical evidence status: Supportive oncology evidence is emerging RCT-level for chemotherapy-induced thrombocytopenia, especially solid tumors, but not yet established as a regulated standard-of-care drug in North America. Dengue-associated thrombocytopenia has broader small-human and review-level support. Direct anticancer evidence is preclinical only and should be treated as weak compared with the platelet-recovery signal.

Carica Papaya Leaf Extract Mechanistic Profile

Rank Pathway / Axis Cancer Cells Normal Cells TSF Primary Effect Notes / Interpretation
1 Megakaryopoiesis / CD110 thrombopoietic signaling ↑ platelet recovery support G Thrombopoietic supportive-care effect Most clinically relevant axis for oncology use; supports platelet recovery during chemotherapy-induced thrombocytopenia rather than direct tumor killing.
2 Platelet preservation / membrane stabilization ↑ platelet survival and functional preservation R/G Reduced thrombocytopenic burden Relevant to dengue and possibly chemotherapy-stressed host tissue; mechanism is extract-dependent and not reducible to papain.
3 Inflammatory cytokine / endothelial stress axis ↔ / ↓ inflammatory support (context-dependent) ↓ inflammatory injury (context-dependent) R/G Host-tissue protection May contribute to platelet protection in inflammatory thrombocytopenia; oncology relevance is supportive rather than cytotoxic.
4 ROS and antioxidant polyphenol response ↔ / ↑ ROS stress (high concentration only) ↓ ROS burden P/R/G Redox modulation Flavonoids and phenolics support antioxidant activity; anticancer pro-oxidant claims require high crude-extract concentrations and should be considered weak translationally.
5 NRF2 / antioxidant-response axis ↔ / ↑ survival risk (context-dependent) ↑ cytoprotection R/G Stress-response adaptation Mechanistically plausible from polyphenol-rich extracts, but not a clean primary anticancer mechanism; could theoretically protect normal tissue and some tumor contexts.
6 Apoptosis and proliferation arrest ↓ proliferation; ↑ apoptosis (high concentration only) ↔ / toxicity risk (dose-dependent) R/G Direct preclinical anticancer effect Observed in breast cancer cell assays at crude-extract concentrations far above typical purified-drug potency; not clinically validated as anticancer therapy.
7 NF-κB / immune-inflammatory signaling ↓ NF-κB-linked survival signaling (model-dependent) ↓ inflammatory tone R/G Anti-inflammatory modulation Potentially relevant but heterogeneous across extract type, solvent, dose, and model; should be secondary in ranking.
8 Bioactive marker variability Carpaine-type alkaloids, flavonoids, phenolics, glycosides, tannins, and minor proteolytic components vary by leaf source and extraction method. G Standardization constraint Use CPLE as the product identity; do not merge into papain. Papain is more relevant to latex / fruit enzyme biology than the platelet-recovery CPLE signal.
9 Clinical Translation Constraint Supportive-care platelet recovery has emerging RCT evidence; direct anticancer effects remain preclinical and high-concentration. Regulatory status remains non-standardized for CIT in many jurisdictions. G Deployment constraint Main database value is chemotherapy-induced thrombocytopenia support, not tumor-directed therapy. Watch for pregnancy, liver impairment, hypoglycemic-drug, P-glycoprotein-substrate, antibiotic, and amiodarone interaction concerns.

TSF legend: P: 0–30 min · R: 30 min–3 hr · G: >3 hr



antiOx, anti-oxidant activities: Click to Expand ⟱
Source:
Type:
Various antioxidants such as Nrf2, SODs, catalase, GPxs, PRDXs, and GSTs are altered in different cancers and have been linked to prognosis. Their overexpression can correlate with aggressive tumor behavior and resistance to treatment in many contexts.


Scientific Papers found: Click to Expand⟱
6370- CPLE,    Delving into the Therapeutic Potential of Carica papaya Leaf against Thrombocytopenia
- Review, Var, NA
CIT↓, *Imm↑, *AntiDiabetic↑, *AntiCan↑, angioG↓, *Bacteria↓, *antiOx↑,
6374- CPLE,    Antiviral & platelet-protective properties of Carica papaya in dengue
- Review, Nor, NA
*antiOx↑, *lipid-P↓, *AntiTum↑, Imm↑, CIT↓,
6375- CPLE,    Beneficial Role of Carica papaya Extracts and Phytochemicals on Oxidative Stress and Related Diseases: A Mini Review
- Review, Var, NA
*antiOx↑, *ROS↓, *Inflam↓, *AntiDiabetic↑, *neuroP↑, *Wound Healing↑, *GSH↑, *MDA↓, *DNAdam↓,

Showing Research Papers: 1 to 3 of 3

* indicates research on normal cells as opposed to diseased cells
Total Research Paper Matches: 3

Pathway results for Effect on Cancer / Diseased Cells:


NA, unassigned

CIT↓, 2,  

Angiogenesis & Vasculature

angioG↓, 1,  

Immune & Inflammatory Signaling

Imm↑, 1,  
Total Targets: 3

Pathway results for Effect on Normal Cells:


Redox & Oxidative Stress

antiOx↑, 3,   GSH↑, 1,   lipid-P↓, 1,   MDA↓, 1,   ROS↓, 1,  

DNA Damage & Repair

DNAdam↓, 1,  

Immune & Inflammatory Signaling

Imm↑, 1,   Inflam↓, 1,  

Functional Outcomes

AntiCan↑, 1,   AntiDiabetic↑, 2,   AntiTum↑, 1,   neuroP↑, 1,   Wound Healing↑, 1,  

Infection & Microbiome

Bacteria↓, 1,  
Total Targets: 14

Scientific Paper Hit Count for: antiOx, anti-oxidant activities
3 Carica papaya leaf extract
Query results interpretion may depend on "conditions" listed in the research papers.
Such Conditions may include : 
  -low or high Dose
  -format for product, such as nano of lipid formations
  -different cell line effects
  -synergies with other products 
  -if effect was for normal or cancerous cells
Filter Conditions: Pro/AntiFlg:%  IllCat:%  CanType:%  Cells:%  prod#:400  Target#:1103  State#:%  Dir#:2
wNotes=0 sortOrder:rid,rpid

 

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