| Features: NSAID | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Celecoxib inhibits the formation of prostaglandins: used primarily to treat pain and other symptoms of osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, joint and musculoskeletal conditions. Celecoxib is a diaryl-substituted selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor that lowers prostaglandin synthesis and is used clinically as an oral nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug. It is formally classified as a small-molecule NSAID and COX-2–preferential inhibitor. Standard abbreviations include celecoxib and CEL. In oncology, its main rationale is suppression of the COX-2/PGE2 inflammatory-tumor axis, with additional COX-2-independent effects reported at higher experimental concentrations, including interference with PDK1/Akt signaling, ER calcium handling, and stress-linked apoptosis pathways. Nestronics lists it as an NSAID and currently indexes mainly EMT, HIF-1α/VEGF, COX-2, NF-κB, p65, and TGF-β/SMAD3-related findings. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Celecoxib is orally active. Peak plasma levels occur at about 3 hours, effective half-life is about 11 hours, steady state is reached by about day 5, and the drug is highly protein bound. Exposure is roughly dose-proportional up to 200 mg twice daily, with less-than-proportional increases above that range because of solubility limits. It is metabolized mainly by CYP2C9, so poor metabolizers and strong CYP2C9 interactions are clinically relevant. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: This is an important translation constraint. Many direct pro-apoptotic, SERCA/ER-stress, and stronger Akt-related anticancer effects are reported in vitro at concentrations commonly above those readily achievable with standard anti-inflammatory dosing. By contrast, COX-2/PGE2 suppression is clearly clinically reachable and is the most exposure-plausible core mechanism. Therefore, low- to mid-micromolar inflammatory and microenvironment effects are more translatable than high-concentration cytotoxic claims. Clinical evidence status: Strong clinical deployment exists for pain/inflammatory indications, not for cancer treatment. In oncology, evidence is mixed: extensive preclinical support, some small human and adjunct studies, but major randomized adjuvant trials in unselected breast and stage III colon cancer were negative overall. A more recent biomarker-defined signal has emerged in PIK3CA-activated stage III colon cancer, where celecoxib appeared beneficial in subgroup analysis, so any cancer role currently looks biomarker- and context-dependent rather than broadly established. Mechanistic table
P: 0–30 min R: 30 min–3 hr G: >3 hr |
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| P65, also known as RelA, is a subunit of the NF-κB (nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells) transcription factor complex. NF-κB plays a crucial role in regulating immune response, inflammation, and cell survival. Due to its role in cancer progression, p65 and the NF-κB pathway are considered potential therapeutic targets. Inhibitors of NF-κB signaling are being explored in preclinical and clinical studies as potential cancer treatments. Many studies have reported that p65 is overexpressed in various types of cancers, including breast, prostate, lung, and colorectal cancers. In some cancers, elevated p65 levels correlate with higher grades of tumors and advanced stages of disease. "RELA proto-oncogene, NF-κB subunit." It encodes the p65 protein, which is a central component of the NF‑κB transcription factor complex. -Chronic activation of RELA and the NF‑κB pathway is frequently associated with cancer progression, promoting inflammation-driven tumorigenesis, chemoresistance, and metastasis. -RELA interacts with other oncogenic signaling networks (for example, STAT3 and MAPK pathways), further integrating environmental signals that favor cancer progression. RELA (p65) is a critical subunit of the NF‑κB transcription factor complex, involved in the regulation of genes that control inflammation, cell survival, and proliferation. In the context of cancer, aberrant activation and overexpression of RELA are frequently associated with aggressive tumor behavior, therapy resistance, and poorer patient outcomes in cancers such as breast, lung, colorectal, and pancreatic cancers, among others. RELA emerges as a potential key contributor to the suppression of glycolysis, mitochondrial respiration, and ATP production in cancer cells. (RELA knockdown signifcantly reduced the tumorigenic. potential of various pancreatic cancer cell lines). |
| 1054- | CEL, | Celecoxib inhibited activation of NF-κB and expression of NF-κB P65 protein in HepG2 cells |
| - | in-vitro, | Liver, | HepG2 |
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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