1.Polysaccharides from Chinese herbal medicine: a review on the hepatoprotective and molecular mechanism.
Jifeng LI ; Haolin GUO ; Ying DONG ; Shuo YUAN ; Xiaotong WEI ; Yuxin ZHANG ; Lu DONG ; Fei WANG ; Ting BAI ; Yong YANG
Chinese Journal of Natural Medicines (English Ed.) 2024;22(1):4-14
Polysaccharides, predominantly extracted from traditional Chinese medicinal herbs such as Lycium barbarum, Angelica sinensis, Astragalus membranaceus, Dendrobium officinale, Ganoderma lucidum, and Poria cocos, represent principal bioactive constituents extensively utilized in Chinese medicine. These compounds have demonstrated significant anti-inflammatory capabilities, especially anti-liver injury activities, while exhibiting minimal adverse effects. This review summarized recent studies to elucidate the hepatoprotective efficacy and underlying molecular mechanisms of these herbal polysaccharides. It underscored the role of these polysaccharides in regulating hepatic function, enhancing immunological responses, and improving antioxidant capacities, thus contributing to the attenuation of hepatocyte apoptosis and liver protection. Analyses of molecular pathways in these studies revealed the intricate and indispensable functions of traditional Chinese herbal polysaccharides in liver injury management. Therefore, this review provides a thorough examination of the hepatoprotective attributes and molecular mechanisms of these medicinal polysaccharides, thereby offering valuable insights for the advancement of polysaccharide-based therapeutic research and their potential clinical applications in liver disease treatment.
Humans
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/pharmacology*
;
Liver Diseases/drug therapy*
;
Antioxidants
;
Polysaccharides/therapeutic use*
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
2.Research progress in pharmacological effectsand mechanism of Fel Ursi against cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases.
Li-Dan ZHU ; Jie LIAO ; Xiao-Yan LU ; Xiao-Hui FAN
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2023;48(23):6307-6314
Fel Ursi is a dried product obtained from the gallbladder of Ursidae animals, such as Selenarctos thibetanus or Ursus arctos, through gallbladder surgery for bile drainage. It is one of the rare animal medicinal materials in China and is known for its therapeutic effects, including clearing heat, removing toxins, extinguishing wind, relieving spasms, clearing the liver, and improving vision. Research has also found that Fel Ursi has pharmacological effects against cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases, such as anti-inflammatory, anti-apoptotic, and antioxidant stress properties. Recently, numerous studies have confirmed the close relationship between cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases and the gut microbiota as well as gut metabolites. Fel Ursi contains bile acid components that may have bidirectional regulatory effects on the gut microbiota and gut metabolites. This aspect could represent a potential therapeutic pathway for Fel Ursi in the treatment of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases. This article comprehensively summarized relevant literature in China and abroad, reviewed the research progress on the pharmacological effects of Fel Ursi against cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases, and explored the impact of Fel Ursi on gut microbiota and gut metabolites, thereby aiming to provide references for further in-depth research and clinical application of Fel Ursi.
Animals
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Cerebrovascular Disorders/drug therapy*
;
Bile Acids and Salts
;
Lung
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Liver
;
Ursidae
;
Cardiovascular Diseases/drug therapy*
3.Therapeutic potential and mechanism of Chinese herbal medicines in treating fibrotic liver disease.
Yanwei LI ; Yunrui LU ; Mozuo NIAN ; Qiuju SHENG ; Chong ZHANG ; Chao HAN ; Xiaoguang DOU ; Yang DING
Chinese Journal of Natural Medicines (English Ed.) 2023;21(9):643-657
Liver fibrosis is a pathological condition characterized by replacement of normal liver tissue with scar tissue, and also the leading cause of liver-related death worldwide. During the treatment of liver fibrosis, in addition to antiviral therapy or removal of inducers, there remains a lack of specific and effective treatment strategies. For thousands of years, Chinese herbal medicines (CHMs) have been widely used to treat liver fibrosis in clinical setting. CHMs are effective for liver fibrosis, though its mechanisms of action are unclear. In recent years, many studies have attempted to determine the possible mechanisms of action of CHMs in treating liver fibrosis. There have been substantial improvements in the experimental investigation of CHMs which have greatly promoted the understanding of anti-liver fibrosis mechanisms. In this review, the role of CHMs in the treatment of liver fibrosis is described, based on studies over the past decade, which has addressed the various mechanisms and signaling pathways that mediate therapeutic efficacy. Among them, inhibition of stellate cell activation is identified as the most common mechanism. This article provides insights into the research direction of CHMs, in order to expand its clinical application range and improve its effectiveness.
Humans
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
;
Fibrosis
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Liver Diseases/drug therapy*
;
Treatment Outcome
;
Liver Cirrhosis/drug therapy*
4.Clinical analysis of liver dysfunction induced by SHR-1210 alone or combined with apatinib and chemotherapy in patients with advanced esophageal squamous cell carcinoma.
Ling QI ; Bo ZHANG ; Yun LIU ; Lan MU ; Qun LI ; Xi WANG ; Jian Ping XU ; Xing Yuan WANG ; Jing HUANG
Chinese Journal of Oncology 2023;45(3):259-264
Objective: To investigate the clinical characteristics of abnormal liver function in patients with advanced esophageal squamous carcinoma treated with programmed death-1 (PD-1) antibody SHR-1210 alone or in combination with apatinib and chemotherapy. Methods: Clinical data of 73 patients with esophageal squamous carcinoma from 2 prospective clinical studies conducted at the Cancer Hospital Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences from May 11, 2016, to November 19, 2019, were analyzed, and logistic regression analysis was used for the analysis of influencing factors. Results: Of the 73 patients, 35 had abnormal liver function. 13 of the 43 patients treated with PD-1 antibody monotherapy (PD-1 monotherapy group) had abnormal liver function, and the median time to first abnormal liver function was 55 days. Of the 30 patients treated with PD-1 antibody in combination with apatinib and chemotherapy (PD-1 combination group), 22 had abnormal liver function, and the median time to first abnormal liver function was 41 days. Of the 35 patients with abnormal liver function, 2 had clinical symptoms, including malaise and loss of appetite, and 1 had jaundice. 28 of the 35 patients with abnormal liver function returned to normal and 7 improved to grade 1, and none of the patients had serious life-threatening or fatal liver function abnormalities. Combination therapy was a risk factor for patients to develop abnormal liver function (P=0.007). Conclusions: Most of the liver function abnormalities that occur during treatment with PD-1 antibody SHR-1210 alone or in combination with apatinib and chemotherapy are mild, and liver function can return to normal or improve with symptomatic treatment. For patients who receive PD-1 antibody in combination with targeted therapy and chemotherapy and have a history of long-term previous smoking, alcohol consumption and hepatitis B virus infection, liver function should be monitored and actively managed in a timely manner.
Humans
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Esophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma/drug therapy*
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Esophageal Neoplasms/pathology*
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Prospective Studies
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Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor/therapeutic use*
;
Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/adverse effects*
;
Liver Diseases/etiology*
5.Standardize the diagnosis and treatment of drug-induced liver injury, and strengthen clinical and translational research.
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2023;31(4):337-338
As a liver disease with the most complex clinical phenotype, drug-induced liver injury (DILI) poses great challenges in diagnosis and management in clinical practice. Although guidelines based on the latest research advances can provide clinicians with guidance on the identification, diagnosis, and management of DILI, the overall level of evidence in this field is relatively low and high-level evidence is limited. Therefore, we should interpret guidelines with caution and look forward to more clinical and translational research to address the huge unmet clinical needs in DILI.
Humans
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Translational Research, Biomedical
;
Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury/therapy*
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Liver Diseases
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Liver Function Tests
6.Intrahepatic and extrahepatic clinical manifestations and treatment progress for hepatitis type E.
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2023;31(5):471-476
Hepatitis type E virus (HEV) is one of the main causes of acute hepatitis globally and has thus gained attention as a public health issue. The diverse clinical manifestations of hepatitis type E are typically acute and self-limiting with mild symptoms, but populations with underlying liver disease or immunocompromised patients can have severe and chronic symptoms. Severity and chronicity can arise and manifest as fulminant hepatitis, chronic hepatitis, or even hepatic failure. HEV infection-induced hepatic failure (acute-on-chronic liver failure), based on the different backgrounds of chronic liver disease, is a clinical phenotype of severe HEV infection that requires attention. In addition, HEV infection can exhibit extrahepatic clinical manifestations of multi-system and organ involvement like neurological diseases (Guillain-Barré syndrome), renal diseases (membranous/membranous proliferative glomerulonephritis, cryoglobulinemia), and blood diseases (thrombocytopenia). At home or abroad, there are no antiviral drugs approved, particularly for HE treatment. Since most acute HE can resolve spontaneously, no special treatment is required clinically. However, in patients with severe or chronic HE, ribavirin (RBV) monotherapy and/or pegylated interferon-combination therapy have achieved certain antiviral effects. Combined small-molecule drugs and RBV have been attempted to treat HEV, but high-level evidence-based treatment is still lacking. Thus, new, highly effective anti-HEV drugs are clinical priorities to address these concerns. Severe and chronic HEV infections' clinical phenotype, early detection, mechanism, intervention, and outcome need additional study.
Humans
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Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use*
;
Ribavirin/therapeutic use*
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Hepatitis, Chronic/drug therapy*
;
Hepatitis E virus
;
Liver Diseases/drug therapy*
;
Liver Failure/drug therapy*
7.Consensus on diagnosis and treatment of invasive fungal infection in patients with severe liver disease.
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2022;30(2):159-168
The prognosis of severe liver disease combined with invasive fungal infection (IFI) is poor, and the clinical manifestations are often atypical. Moreover, most of the antifungal drugs are metabolized in the liver, with severe toxicities and side effects, making clinical diagnosis and treatment difficult. The Professional Committee for Hepatology, the Chinese Research Hospital Association and the Hepatology Branch of China Medical Association organized relevant experts to formulate an expert consensus based on the characteristics of patients with severe liver disease combined with IFI, in order to provide reference for medical personnel in making decisions on the diagnosis and treatment.
Antifungal Agents/therapeutic use*
;
Consensus
;
Humans
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Invasive Fungal Infections/therapy*
;
Liver Diseases/drug therapy*
8.Association of liver damage with coronary artery lesion and no response to intravenous immunoglobulin in the acute stage of Kawasaki disease.
Hui-Min HU ; Xiao-Zheng CHEN ; Yong-Lan ZHANG ; Zhong-Dong DU
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2022;24(6):681-686
OBJECTIVES:
To summarize the clinical features of liver damage in children in the acute stage of Kawasaki disease (KD), and to investigate the clinical value of liver damage in predicting coronary artery lesion and no response to intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) in children with KD.
METHODS:
The medical data were collected from 925 children who were diagnosed with KD for the first time in Beijing Children's Hospital from January 1, 2016 to December 31, 2017. According to the presence or absence of abnormal alanine aminotransferase (ALT) level on admission, the children were divided into a liver damage group (n=284) and a non-liver damage group (n=641). A logistic regression analysis was used to investigate the clinical value of the indicators including liver damage in predicting coronary artery lesion and no response to IVIG in children with KD.
RESULTS:
Compared with the non-liver damage group, the liver damage group had a significantly earlier admission time and significantly higher serum levels of inflammatory indicators (P<0.05). The liver damage group had a significantly higher incidence rate of coronary artery lesion on admission than the non-liver damage group (P=0.034). After initial IVIG therapy, the liver damage group had a significantly higher proportion of children with no response to IVIG than the non-liver damage group (P<0.001). In children with KD, coronary artery lesion was associated with the reduction in the hemoglobin level and the increases in platelet count, C-reactive protein, and ALT (P<0.05), and no response to IVIG was associated with limb changes, the reduction in the hemoglobin level, the increases in platelet count, C-reactive protein, and ALT, and coronary artery lesion (P<0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
Compared with those without liver damage, the children in the early stage of KD with liver damage tend to develop clinical symptoms early and have higher levels of inflammatory indicators, and they are more likely to have coronary artery lesion and show no response to IVIG treatment.
C-Reactive Protein/analysis*
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Child
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Coronary Vessels/pathology*
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Hemoglobins/analysis*
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Humans
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Immunoglobulins, Intravenous/therapeutic use*
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Liver Diseases
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Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome/drug therapy*
;
Retrospective Studies
9.Study on the mechanism of Flos Puerariae and Semen Hoveniae in treatment of alcoholic liver injury based on network pharmacology and molecular docking.
Yanan WANG ; Xiaoming YAN ; Qingyu ZHANG ; Aihua SONG ; Fei HAN
Journal of Zhejiang University. Medical sciences 2020;49(6):714-724
OBJECTIVE:
To explore the mechanism of Flos Puerariae and Semen Hoveniae in treatment of alcoholic liver injury (ALI) based on network pharmacology and molecular docking.
METHODS:
The information of chemical constituents and targets of Flos Puerariae and Semen Hoveniae was collected from TCMSP and Swiss databases, and the threshold values of oral bioavailability (OB) ≥ 30%, drug likeness (DL) ≥0.18 were used to screen the potential active compounds. The GeneCard and DrugBank databases were used to obtain the targets corresponding to ALI. The common targets were queried using Venn Diagram, and the network of PPI and Gene Ontology (GO) functional enrichment analysis and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathway enrichment analysis were performed through DAVID and Reactome database. Autodock Vina software was used for molecular docking of potential ingredients and key targets.
RESULTS:
A total of 21 potential active compounds and 431 therapeutic targets were gathered in Flos Puerariae and Semen Hoveniae, which involved 273 biological functions, 90 KEGG pathways and 362 Reactome pathways. The GO functions involved protein binding, ATP binding, etc.; the KEGG pathways mainly included PI3K-Akt signaling pathway and TNF signaling pathway; the Reactome pathways contained signal transduction and immune system, etc. The results of molecular docking showed that 21 potential active ingredients had good affinity with the core targets Akt1, TP53 and IL-6.
CONCLUSIONS
The network pharmacology and molecular docking analysis demonstrate the synergetic effect of Flos Puerariae and Semen Hoveniae with multi-compounds, multi-targets and multi-pathways in the treatment of ALI; and also predict the possible medicinal substance, key targets and pathways, which provides clues for the new drug development and mechanism research.
Animals
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Computer Simulation
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
;
Lepidoptera/chemistry*
;
Liver/drug effects*
;
Liver Diseases, Alcoholic/therapy*
;
Molecular Docking Simulation
;
Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases/metabolism*
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Plant Extracts/therapeutic use*
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Rhamnaceae/chemistry*
;
Signal Transduction/drug effects*
10.EGFR-TKI ADR Management Chinese Expert Consensus.
Chinese Society of Lung Cancer, Chinese Anti-Cancer Association
Chinese Journal of Lung Cancer 2019;22(2):57-81
ErbB receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (EGFR-TKI), gefitinib, erlotinib, icotinib and aftinib, which are approved as a frontline treatment for patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who have tumors harboring EGFR mutations in China. And osimertinib was approved in second line setting for patients with EGFRT 790M-positive NSCLC. Rash, paronychia, diarrhea, stomatitis, liver dysfunction and (interstitial lung disease, ILD) are frequently observed in patients treated with EGFR-TKI. Chinese Society of Lung Cancer, Chinese Anti-Cancer Association, organized Chinese experts to develop the Chinese expert consensus on EGFR-TKI adverse event (AE) management based on domestic diagnosis and treatment of ADR and also incorporating international updated theory and recommendations.
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Antineoplastic Agents
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adverse effects
;
therapeutic use
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Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung
;
drug therapy
;
enzymology
;
genetics
;
China
;
Diarrhea
;
etiology
;
ErbB Receptors
;
antagonists & inhibitors
;
genetics
;
metabolism
;
Humans
;
Liver Diseases
;
etiology
;
Lung Diseases
;
etiology
;
Lung Neoplasms
;
drug therapy
;
enzymology
;
genetics
;
Protein Kinase Inhibitors
;
adverse effects
;
therapeutic use
;
Stomatitis
;
etiology

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