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| CUSP9 coordinated undermining of survival paths with nine repurposed drugs -includes aprepitant, artesunate, auranofin, captopril, celecoxib, disulfiram, itraconazole, sertraline, ritonavir CUSP9 — CUSP9 is a coordinated multi-drug repurposing regimen for glioblastoma built around the concept of Coordinated Undermining of Survival Paths. It is a polypharmacologic adjunct oncology protocol rather than a single molecular entity, formally classified as a multi-agent drug-repurposing regimen used with low-dose metronomic temozolomide in the clinically tested CUSP9v3 version. Standard abbreviations include CUSP9, CUSP9*, and CUSP9v3. The regimen originated from the International Initiative for Accelerated Improvement of Glioblastoma Care and subsequent Ulm University clinical development. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: CUSP9 is orally administered and highly PK-constrained because it combines multiple approved drugs with different half-lives, CNS penetration, protein binding, hepatic metabolism, and CYP or transporter effects. CUSP9v3 specifically requires careful dose escalation and monitoring because ritonavir, itraconazole, aprepitant, celecoxib, sertraline, and other components create clinically meaningful interaction potential. BBB exposure is component-specific and may not scale linearly with plasma exposure. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: CUSP9 is concentration-driven, but the clinically relevant question is not the exposure of one drug alone; it is whether simultaneous low-to-moderate exposure across multiple repurposed agents can suppress glioblastoma escape pathways. Some in-vitro work used clinically oriented fixed concentrations, but sensitivity is model-dependent, and lower-order subsets may match or exceed the full nine-drug cocktail in some patient-derived cultures. Translation should therefore treat in-vitro efficacy as supportive, not definitive. Clinical evidence status: Preclinical rationale is extensive and includes multiple in-vitro glioblastoma and glioma stem-like cell studies. Human evidence is small but real: compassionate-use experience and a phase Ib/IIa recurrent glioblastoma trial support feasibility and tolerability under careful monitoring. Efficacy remains unproven because randomized outcome data are not yet available. CUSP9/CUSP9v3 is not an approved oncology regimen; its components are approved for other indications. CUSP9 cancer mechanism table
TSF legend: P: 0–30 min; R: 30 min–3 hr; G: >3 hr |
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| Oxygen consumption rate (OCR) is a measure of the rate at which cells consume oxygen, and it has been found to be altered in cancer cells. Cancer cells often exhibit increased glycolysis, a process in which glucose is converted into energy without the use of oxygen, even in the presence of oxygen. This is known as the Warburg effect. Cancer cells often exhibit increased glycolysis, which leads to a decrease in OCR. -When mitochondrial function is impaired (resulting in lower OCR), cells may compensate by upregulating glycolysis to meet their energy needs (known as the Pasteur effect). -Instruments such as the Seahorse Analyzer allow simultaneous measurement of OCR (reflecting mitochondrial respiration) and Extracellular Acidification Rate (ECAR, which is commonly used as a proxy for glycolysis). This dual measurement helps researchers understand how shifts in one pathway correlate with compensatory changes in the other. |
| 6236- | CUSP9, | EP, | Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields) combined with the drug repurposing approach CUSP9v3 induce metabolic reprogramming and synergistic anti-glioblastoma activity in vitro |
| - | in-vitro, | GBM, | U251 |
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
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