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| α-Santalol / Sandalwood oil — α-Santalol is a lipophilic sesquiterpene alcohol and major bioactive constituent of East Indian sandalwood oil from Santalum album. It is best classified as a natural-product small molecule / essential-oil sesquiterpenoid, with sandalwood oil functioning as a botanical mixture source rather than a single-compound drug. Standard abbreviations include α-SAN, alpha-santalol, and SAO or EISO for sandalwood album / East Indian sandalwood oil. The oncology evidence is primarily preclinical, strongest for skin, prostate, breast, and oral cancer models, with no established oncology indication. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: α-Santalol is a small, highly lipophilic sesquiterpene alcohol, so topical and transdermal exposure is plausible, but formal human systemic PK data are limited. Oral/transdermal use should be treated as formulation- and dose-dependent, and essential-oil exposure is not equivalent to purified α-santalol exposure. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Most anticancer cell-culture studies use micromolar α-santalol concentrations, commonly around 20–75 μM depending on model and endpoint. These levels should be considered potentially above reliably documented human systemic exposure from sandalwood oil use, so in-vitro anticancer potency should not be interpreted as clinically achievable without dedicated PK/formulation data. Clinical evidence status: Preclinical for cancer prevention/therapy. Small human and dermatology-oriented evidence exists for sandalwood album oil in non-oncology skin conditions, and one clinical-trial context appears related to oral mucositis/supportive care rather than anticancer efficacy. No approved oncology indication and no high-quality human RCT evidence for cancer treatment were identified. α-Santalol and Sandalwood Oil Mechanistic Profile
P: 0–30 min R: 30 min–3 hr G: >3 hr |
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| Members of the caspase family of proteases play essential roles in the initiation and execution of apoptosis. These caspases are divided into two groups: the initiator caspases (caspase-2, −8, −9 and −10), which are the first to be activated in response to a signal, and the executioner caspases (caspase-3, −6, and −7) that carry out the demolition phase of apoptosis.
Downregulation of caspase-3 is an effective apoptosis-evading mechanism frequently observed in cancer cells in association with acquired chemoresistance to apoptosis-inducing anticancer drugs. Indeed, re-expression of caspase-3 often restores sensitivity to apoptosis. Caspase-7: Role: Executioner caspase similar to caspase-3. Cancers: Expression levels can vary; often studied in breast and prostate cancers. Prognosis: Its prognostic value is less clear and may depend on the cancer type. |
| 6445- | SAO, | Antineoplastic Effects of α-Santalol on Estrogen Receptor-Positive and Estrogen Receptor-Negative Breast Cancer Cells through Cell Cycle Arrest at G2/M Phase and Induction of Apoptosis |
| - | in-vitro, | BC, | MDA-MB-231 | - | in-vitro, | Nor, | MCF10 | - | in-vitro, | BC, | MCF-10AT |
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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