TURKISH JOURNAL OF ONCOLOGY
2015 , Vol 30 , Num 2
The development of cytotoxic chemotherapeutics in the twentieth century
İstanbul Üniversitesi İstanbul Tıp Fakültesi, Tıp Tarihi ve Etik Anabilim Dalı, İstanbul
Although medicines have been obtained from natural products
for millennia, extensive systematic studies to obtain anticancer
agents through isolation from natural sources or through
synthesis in the laboratory were attempted in the twentieth
century. The same period also saw the development of animal
models through which in vivo preclinical research could be
conducted to examine the anticancer potential of chemicals,
in addition to in vitro research. In the 1940s the era of modern
cancer chemotherapy started with the introduction of the first
classical chemotherapeutics; the first alkylating agents were
obtained in the early 1940s and the first antimetabolites toward
the end of the decade. In the 1950s scientists ventured out of
the laboratory to discover natural products with anticancer
potential. Since microorganisms, sessile terrestrial plants and
marine invertebrates have evolved a large number of chemical
defense mechanisms, it has been argued that some substances
out of these might show anticancer activity. Tens of thousands
of natural products derived from these organisms have been
screened for anticancer activity primarily by the US since the
1950s. Vinca alkaloids introduced in the 1960s, anticancer antibiotics
in the 1970s and taxanes in the 1990s are examples of
the encouraging outcomes. In addition to local interventions
such as surgery and radiotherapy, cancer chemotherapy based
upon these therapeutic agents is available in medicine today as
a systemic modality in the treatment of the disease.
Keywords :
Cancer chemotherapy; history of chemotherapy; cytotoxic chemotherapeutics