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Title: Modulating body/cranial hair growth
United States Patent: 6,465,421
Issued: October 15, 2002
Inventors: Duranton; Albert (Paris, FR); De Lacharriere;
Olivier (Paris, FR)
Assignee: Societe l'Oreal S.A. (Paris, FR)
Appl. No.: 886157
Filed: June 30, 1997
Abstract
The growth of body and/or head/cranial hair on mammalian organisms, for
example humans, is modulated by administering thereto, whether topically
and/or systemically, therapeutically effective amounts of at least one
lipoxygenase or cyclooxygenase inhibitor, or at least one lipoxygenase or
cyclooxygenase stimulator, preferably in the presence of at least one
lipoxygenase/cyclooxygenase substrate or precursor thereof; when a
hair-growth or hair loss-limiting response is sought to be elicited, a
lipoxygenase inhibitor and/or cyclooxygenase stimulator is administered
(conversely, to reduce or prevent hair growth, a lipoxygenase stimulator
and/or cyclooxygenase inhibitor is administered).
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF BEST MODE AND PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS OF THE
INVENTION
More particularly according to the present invention, from a practical
standpoint, eliciting one or the other enzymatic response can be carried
out via several different techniques, more fully described below. Each
such technique is bottomed on the same basic principle, namely, to supply
the organism, in particular the skin cells thereof, with compounds
intended either to inhibit or, to the contrary, to stimulate the action or
influence of cyclooxygenase or lipoxygenase enzymes, the selection of
which obviously being made depending on the particular pharmacological
effect sought to be attained.
Thus, if it is desired to promote the growth and/or to limit the loss of
body and/or head hair (or conversely, if it is desired to retard and/or to
prevent the growth of such hair), and taking account of the fact that it
is appropriate, in this instance, as indicated above, to favor the
cyclooxygenase route (or, conversely, to favor the lipoxygenase route), it
is then possible to adopt, as desired, at least one of the following
techniques: either employing one or more lipoxygenase inhibitors (or,
conversely, one or more cyclooxygenase inhibitors), or employing one or
more cyclooxygenase stimulators or agonists (or, conversely, one or more
lipoxygenase stimulators or agonists), or employing one or more
lipoxygenase inhibitors (or, conversely, one or more cyclooxygenase
inhibitors) in combination with one or more cyclooxygenase stimulators or
agonists (or, conversely, one or more lipoxygenase stimulators or
agonists), or, alternatively, employing one or more active agents having
the property of being both lipoxygenase inhibitors (or, conversely,
cyclooxygenase inhibitors) and cyclooxygenase stimulators or agonists (or,
conversely, lipoxygenase stimulators or agonists) simultaneously.
Stated differently, it is thus possible to elicit a given enzymatic
response by direct stimulation of one particular route and/or via
inhibition of the "contrary" route. The best results are typically
attained by combining the two routes.
The present invention also features, both in a therapeutic regimen for
promoting the growth of body and/or head hair and in a competing
therapeutic regimen for limiting such hair growth, whether employing said
inhibitors and stimulators or agonists of the aforesaid enzymatic routes,
combining therewith treatment with at least one substrate which is
directly metabolizable by lipoxygenases and cyclooxygenases and or with at
least one precursor of said at least one substrate (synergistic or
superadditive effect).
As utilized herein, by the term "substrate" suitable for lipoxygenase and
cyclooxygenase is intended any substance which may be metabolized
directly, as is in vivo, both by lipoxygenase enzymes and cyclooxygenase
enzymes.
By the term lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase substrate "precursor" is
intended any substance which may be metabolized in vivo by the organism
into a suitable substrate for lipoxygenases and cyclooxygenases, as well
as any substance inducing the formation of polyunsaturated fatty acids in
living tissues (this may be determined by gas chromatography or by any
other standard technique, such as those described by Pelick et al, P23
"Analysis of lipids and lipoproteins", Perkin's American Oil Chemist
Society editions, Champaign, Ill., U.S.A.).
By the term lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase "inhibitor" is intended any
substance which makes it possible, in vivo, to limit or to inhibit totally
the enzymatic activity of one or the other of the aforesaid enzymes.
By the term lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase "stimulator" or "agonist" is
intended any substance which elicits, in vivo, an increase in the
enzymatic activity of one or the other of these enzymes, the term
"agonist" being included in the general designation "stimulator".
By "topical route" is intended any conventional technique for
administration of an active agent by direct application thereof to a
superficial (or external) parts of the body, such as skin, hair, etc.
And by "systemic route" is intended any conventional technique for
administration of an active agent into the circulation via a route other
than the topical route, for example, via the oral and/or parenteral route.
Thus, in a first embodiment of the present invention, an in vivo regimen
is provided for modifying the growth of body and/or head hair, such
regimen comprising administering to a mammalian organism, notably a human
being, via a topical and/or systemic route, at least one lipoxygenase or
cyclooxygenase inhibitor, or at least one lipoxygenase or cyclooxygenase
stimulator or agonist.
In the event that the subject regimen/treatment is more particularly
intended to promote the growth and/or to limit the loss of body and/or
head hair, at least one active agent comprising a lipoxygenase inhibitor
and/or a cyclooxygenase stimulator is employed.
In the event that the subject regimen/treatment is more particularly
intended to retard and/or prevent the growth of body and/or head hair, at
least one active agent comprising a lipoxygenase stimulator and/or a
cyclooxygenase inhibitor is employed.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the therapeutic regimen
according to the invention, conjointly with said inhibitors or
stimulators, at least one substrate for lipoxygenases and cyclooxygenases,
or a precursor of said at least one substrate, is also administered to the
organism. Administration of said substrate or of said precursor may then
be carried out via a topical and/or systemic route, in a simultaneous or
separate manner, or alternatively, in fractions over time, each relative
to the administration of the lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase inhibitors or
stimulators.
In another embodiment of the present invention, special packages
containing several compartments, or "kits," are used for carrying out the
subject regimen, and in particular kits which comprise, in a first
compartment, one or more lipoxygenase or cyclooxygenase inhibitors or one
or more lipoxygenase or cyclooxygenase stimulators and, in a second
compartment, one or more substrates for lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase
and/or one or more precursors of said one or more substrates. The
compositions contained in said first and second compartments are thus
considered combination compositions for simultaneous or separate use, or
for use as separate fractions thereof over time, in a regimen for
modulating the growth of body and/or head/cranial hair.
Thus, the present invention also features novel compositions or
associations, per se, well suited for carrying out the various embodiments
of the therapeutic regimen described above.
Next, the nature of the various active agents and compositions useful in
the treatment of the present invention
(inhibitor/stimulator/substrate/precursor) will be more fully described.
The inhibitory or stimulatory (or agonistic) activity of a given agent
with respect to lipoxygenases or cyclooxygenases may easily be determined
by one skilled in this art, in particular by means of the usual
biochemical tests, generally based on chromatographic analyses. Thus, such
activities may, for example, be determined via the following techniques or
via any other standardized technique:
(a) Activity with respect to lipoxygenase 5, 12 and 15: exemplary is the
technique comprising incubating a biological material (human
polymorphonuclear leukocytes or hair) in the presence of C14 arachidonic
acid or C14 linoleic acid; the hydroxy acids formed are extracted and
separated by thin layer chromatography or HPLC chromatography (Vanderhoeck
J. Y. and Bailey J. M. in J. Biol. Chem., 259, pp 6,752-6,761 (1984);
Huang M. et al, Cancer Res., 51, pp 813-819 (1991); Baer A. N. and Green
F. A. in J. Lipids Res., 34, pp 1,505-1,514 (1993); Ziboh V. A. et al in
J. Invest. Dermatol., 83, pp 248-251 (1984);
(b) Activity with respect to lipoxygenase 5: exemplary are the
spectrophotometric techniques described by Aharony D. and Stein R. L. in
J. Biol. Chem., 261, pp 11,512-11,517 (1986), and by McMillan R. M. et al
in Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1005, pp 170-176 (1989);
(c) Activity with respect to cyclooxygenases: exemplary is the technique
based on the use of a biological material (epidermis) incubated in the
presence of C14 arachidonic acid; the hydroxy acids formed are extracted
and separated by HPLC chromatography (Huang M. et al, Cancer Res., 51, pp
813-819 (1991) or identified by radioimmunoassays (Lysz T. W. and
Needleman P. J., in Neurochim., 38, pp 1,111-1,117 (1982). Also exemplary
is the test described in the article "Nitric Oxide Activates
Cyclo-oxygenase Enzymes", by D. Salvameni et al, Proc. Natl. Sci. USA,
Vol. 90, pp 7,240-7,244, August 1993.
The lipoxygenase inhibitors are advantageously selected from among the
redox and non-redox inhibitors, redox inhibitor precursors, antioxidants,
iron-chelating agents, imidazole-containing compounds, phenothiazines and
benzopyran derivatives, as well as from certain eicosanoids.
The redox inhibitors may be selected from among catecholbutane derivatives
(U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,008,294, 4,708,964 and 4,880,637, such as
nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA) or one of the enantiomers thereof, such
as masoprocol.
The redox inhibitors may also be selected from among phenidone, lonapalene,
indazolinones, naphazatrom, benzofuranol, alkylhydroxylamine and the
compounds of the following formulae: ##STR1##
The non-redox inhibitors may be selected from among the hydroxythiazoles,
methoxyalkylthiazoles, benzopyrans and derivatives thereof,
methoxytetrahydropyran, boswellic acids and the acetyl derivatives
thereof, and quinoline methoxyphenylacetic acids substituted with
cycloalkyl radicals.
The antioxidant is advantageously selected from among the phenols, propyl
gallate, flavonoids and natural compounds containing such flavonoids
(Ginkgo biloba).
Exemplary flavonoids include the hydroxylated flavone derivatives such as
flavonol, dihydroquercetin, luteolin, galangin and orobol. Also exemplary
are the chalcone derivatives such as 4,2',4'-trihydroxychalcone,
ortho-aminophenols, N-hydroxyureas, benzofuranols and ebselen, and active
agents that enhance the activity of the reducing selenoenzymes.
The iron-chelating agent is advantageously selected from among the
hydroxamic acids and derivatives thereof, N-hydroxyureas,
2-benzyl-1-naphthol, catechols, hydroxylamines, carnosol, naphthol,
sulfasalazine, zileuton, 5-hydroxyanthranilic acid and 4-(.omega.-arylalkyl)phenylalkanoic
acids.
The imidazole-containing compounds are preferably ketoconazole or
itraconazole.
Exemplary eicosanoid inhibitors of lipoxygenases include
octadecatetraenoic acid, eicosatetraenoic acid, docosapentenoic acid,
eicosahexaenoic acid and docosahexaenoic acid and the various esters
thereof, as well as various other eicosanoids, which may optionally be in
ester form, such as PGE1 (prostaglandin E1), PGA2
(prostaglandin A2) viprostol, 15-monohydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid,
15-monohydroxyeicosatrienoic acid, 15-monohydroxy-eicosapentaenoic acid
and leukotrienes B5, C5 and D5.
Various other compounds that inhibit lipoxygenases can also be used, for
example active agents interfering with the flow of calcium, in particular
phenothiazines and diphenylbutylamines, verapamil, fuscoside, curcumin,
chlorogenic acid, caffeic acid, 5,8,11,14-eicosatetraynoic acid (ETYA),
hydroyphenylretinamide, lanopalene, esculin, diethylcarbamazine,
phenanthroline, baicalein, proxicromil, thioethers and in particular
diallyl sulfide and di-(1-propenyl)sulfide.
The lipoxygenase stimulators themselves are advantageously selected from
among the cytokines such as fibroblast growth factor (FGF.beta.),
transforming growth factor (TGF.beta.) and epidermal growth factor (EGF).
The cyclooxygenase inhibitors are advantageously non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory agents such as arylcarboxylic derivatives, pyrazole-containing
derivatives, oxicam derivatives and nicotinic acid derivatives.
The cyclooxygenase stimulators or agonists are preferably selected from
among the arachidonic acid metabolites, nitric oxide and nitric
oxide-donating compounds, stanozolol, glutathione-donating compounds,
neuropeptides and in particular vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP),
calcium, ionophores, anthocyanosides.
Lastly, an exemplary active agent which can serve as both a lipoxygenase
inhibitor and as a cyclooxygenase stimulator is
6-chloro-2,3-dihydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinone (CDNQ).
With respect to suitable lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase substrates,
representative are the polyunsaturated fatty acids, in particular those
containing 20 carbon atoms, such as arachidonic acid, dihomo-.gamma.-linolenic
acid, or, alternatively, eicosapentaenoic acid.
Particularly exemplary precursors of such substrates are the so-called
essential polyunsaturated fatty acids such as linoleic acid, .alpha.-linolenic
acid and .gamma.-linolenic acid, as well as cell membrane phospholipids
such as phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylcholine,
phosphatidylinositol and diphosphatidylglycerol.
The above substrates or substrate precursors, in particular, may be
obtained from certain natural compounds, in particular from certain foods,
of animal, vegetable or microbial origin (vegetable oil extracts such as
common evening primrose oil, borage oil, black currant seed oil, evening
primrose oil, fish oil extracts and insect tissue oil extracts).
According to the present invention, such natural compounds which contain
the desired substrates and/or the precursors of the desired substrates can
be used directly. It is also possible to use materials produced by
industrial synthesis.
It will also be appreciated that mixtures of inhibitors, mixtures of
stimulators, mixtures of substrates and mixtures of precursors, as well
and mixtures of these mixtures can be used equally as well, provided, of
course, that these mixtures of mixtures remain compatible with the desired
therapeutic response.
The regimen or therapeutic treatment according to the invention will now
be more fully described.
As indicated above, the subject treatment process essentially comprises
administering to a mammalian organism, via the topical and/or systemic
route, at least one lipoxygenase or cyclooxygenase inhibitor, or at least
one lipoxygenase or cyclooxygenase stimulator. Such administration is
preferably conducted in combination (simultaneous, separate or in separate
fractions over time) with administration of at least one substrate, or at
least one substrate precursor, as described above.
The enzyme inhibitors and stimulators are preferably administered
topically.
The substrates and/or the precursors thereof may themselves be
administered either via the systemic route, and in this event, preferably
via the oral route, or, even more preferably, via the topical route.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the present invention, topically
acceptable compositions containing enzyme inhibitors and/or stimulators on
the one hand, in conjunction with the substrates and/or the precursors
thereof on the other, are applied to the skin and/or the scalp.
It will be appreciated that all of the above compounds and compositions
may be conventionally packaged in a form suiting the mode of
administration or application intended (lotions, shampoos, tablets, syrups
and the like), and whether or not including any topically or systemically
pharmaceutically acceptable carrier or diluent therefor.
The compositions or "kits" according to the present invention include, in
particular, the following:
(i) compositions (A) comprising at least one lipoxygenase inhibitor and at
least one cyclooxygenase stimulator;
(ii) compositions (B) comprising at least one cyclooxygenase inhibitor and
at least one lipoxygenase stimulator;
(iii) compositions (C) comprising at least one lipoxygenase inhibitor
and/or at least one cyclooxygenase stimulator, in combination with at
least one substrate for lipoxygenases and cyclooxygenases and/or at least
one precursor of such a substrate;
(iv) compositions (D) comprising at least one cyclooxygenase inhibitor
and/or at least one lipoxygenase stimulator, in combination with at least
one substrate for lipoxygenases and cyclooxygenases and/or at least one
precursor of such a substrate;
(v) "kits" (E) comprising, in a first packet or compartment, at least one
lipoxygenase inhibitor and, in a second packet or compartment, at least
one cyclooxygenase stimulator;
(vi) "kits" (F) comprising, in a first packet or compartment, at least one
cyclooxygenase inhibitor and, in a second packet or compartment, at least
one lipoxygenase stimulator;
(vii) "kits" (G) comprising, in a first packet or compartment, at least
one lipoxygenase inhibitor and/or at least one cyclooxygenase stimulator,
or, conversely, at least one cyclooxygenase inhibitor and/or at least one
lipoxygenase stimulator, and, in a second packet or compartment, at least
one substrate for lipoxygenases and cyclooxygenases and/or at least one
precursor of such a substrate.
Also as indicated above, each of the compositions (A), (B), (C) and (D),
as well as each of the components in the compartments of the kits (E), (F)
and (G), are conventionally packaged in a form suited for the various
modes of administration or application envisaged therefor (lotions,
shampoos, tablets, syrups, etc.). Thus, the compositions (A)-(D) and the
kits (E)-(F) are preferably packaged in a form suitable for topical
application and, in respect of the kits (G), the components of the first
compartment are preferably packaged in a form adapted for topical
application, whereas the components of the second compartment are packaged
in a form adapted for oral administration.
In general, kits can be designed containing as many separate compartments
as active agents (inhibitors, stimulators, substrates or substrate
precursors) as desired or convenient to use.
The compositions or kits according to this invention, as well as the
therapeutic regimen consistent therewith, may also include various
conventional and usual additives and adjuvants, in particular cosmetics in
the case of topical applications (in particular hair products), for
example UV filters, thickening agents, penetrating agents such as urea,
organic solvents such as ethanol and isopropanol, alkylene glycols,
surface-active agents selected from among nonionic surfactants such as
alkylpolyglycosides, cationic surfactants, anionic surfactants and
amphoteric surfactants, dyes and pigments, anti-dandruff agents, perfumes
and preservatives.
It is also possible to incorporate into the compositions according to the
invention active agents having known activity in the field of body and/or
head hair growth, for example such as
2,4-diamino-6-piperidinopyrimidine-3-oxide marketed under the trademark "Minoxidil"
by Upjohn.
To attain appreciable effects, the frequency of administration or
application of the compositions according to the invention, both with and
without substrate or substrate precursor, is on the order of one to two
times per day, for such prolonged period of time as is required to elicit
the desired therapeutic response. In this regard, it should be appreciated
that therapeutically effective amounts of inhibitors and or stimulators
are, in general, quite low.
The present invention finds particularly useful applications in the field
of treating various pathologies affecting the skin and/or the scalp, in
particular hirsutism and alopecia, in particular iatrogenic alopecia.
Claim 1 of 1 Claim
What is claimed is:
1. A method of promoting hair growth comprising administering to a subject
in need thereof a lipoxygenase inhibitor for a time and under conditions
effective to promote hair growth, wherein said lipoxygenase inhibitor is
selected from the group consisting of linoleic acid, nafazatrom, borage
oil (isolated from Borago officinalis), Ginkgo biloba (isolated from the
Ginkgo biloba tree), ketoconozole
(cis-1-Acetyl-4-[4-[[2-(2,4-dichlorophenyl)-2-(1H-imidazol-1-ylmethyl)-1,3
-dioxolan-4-yl]methoxy]phenyl]piperazine), diallyl sulfide, masoprocol
(beta,gamma-Dimethyl-alpha,delta-bis(3,4-dihydroxyphenyl) butane, isolated
from Larrea tridentata), benzofuranol, boswellic acid
((3.alpha.,4.beta.)-3-hydroxyurs-12-en-23-oic acid, isolated from
Boswellia carterii), flavenol, dihydroquercetin, luteolin
(2-(3,4-Dihydroxyphenyl)-5,7-dihydroxy-4H-1-benzopyran-4-one,
eicosahexaenoic acid, docosapentaenoic acid, galangin
((3,5,7-Trihydroxyflavone)) and docosahexaenoic acid.
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