Vorinostat


Vorinostat also known as suberanilohydroxamic acid is a member of a larger class of compounds that inhibit histone deacetylases. Histone deacetylase inhibitors have a broad spectrum of epigenetic activities.
Vorinostat is marketed under the name Zolinza by Merck for the treatment of cutaneous manifestations in patients with cutaneous T cell lymphoma when the disease persists, gets worse, or comes back during or after two systemic therapies. The compound was developed by Columbia University chemist Ronald Breslow and Memorial Sloan-Kettering researcher Paul Marks.

Medical uses

Vorinostat was the first histone deacetylase inhibitor approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of CTCL on October 6, 2006. It also failed to demonstrate efficacy in treating acute myeloid leukemia in a phase II study.

Mechanism of action

Vorinostat has been shown to bind to the active site of histone deacetylases and act as a chelator for zinc ions also found in the active site of histone deacetylases.
Vorinostat's inhibition of histone deacetylases results in the accumulation of acetylated histones and acetylated proteins, including transcription factors crucial for the expression of genes needed to induce cell differentiation. It acts on class I, II and IV of histone deacetylase.

Clinical trials

Vorinostat has also been used to treat Sézary syndrome, another type of lymphoma closely related to CTCL.
A recent study suggested that vorinostat also possesses some activity against recurrent glioblastoma multiforme, resulting in a median overall survival of 5.7 months. Further brain tumor trials are planned in which vorinostat will be combined with other drugs.
Including vorinostat in treatment of advanced non-small-cell lung carcinoma showed improved response rates and increased median progression free survival and overall survival.
It has given encouraging results in a phase II trial for myelodysplastic syndromes in combination with idarubicin and cytarabine.

Preclinical investigations

Vorinostat is being investigated as a potential HIV latency reversing agent as part of an investigational therapeutic strategy known as "shock and kill." Vorinostat was shown to reactivate HIV in latently HIV-infected T cells, both in vitro and in vivo.
Vorinostat also has shown some activity against the pathophysiological changes in α1-antitrypsin deficiency and cystic fibrosis.
Recent evidence also suggests vorinostat can be a therapeutic tool for Niemann-Pick type C1, a rare lysosomal lipid storage disease.
Preclinical experiments by University of Alabama at Birmingham researchers suggest the cancer drugs vorinostat, belinostat and panobinostat might be repurposed to treat infections caused by human papillomavirus, or HPV.