Abstract

Oxidative stress is a component of many diseases, including atherosclerosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, Alzheimer disease and cancer. Although numerous small molecules evaluated as antioxidants have exhibited therapeutic potential in preclinical studies, clinical trial results have been disappointing. A greater understanding of the mechanisms through which antioxidants act and where and when they are effective may provide a rational approach that leads to greater pharmacological success. Here, we review the relationships between oxidative stress, redox signalling and disease, the mechanisms through which oxidative stress can contribute to pathology, how antioxidant defences work, what limits their effectiveness and how antioxidant defences can be increased through physiological signalling, dietary components and potential pharmaceutical intervention. Although oxidative stress is associated with a broad range of diseases, therapeutic antioxidant approaches have so far been disappointing. Here, Forman and Zhang review the roles of oxidative stress and redox signalling in disease, assess antioxidant therapeutic strategies and highlight key limitations that have challenged their clinical application.

Keywords

Oxidative stressDiseaseAntioxidantMedicineClinical trialPharmacologyBioinformaticsBiologyPathologyInternal medicineBiochemistry

MeSH Terms

AnimalsAntioxidantsDrug DevelopmentDrug EvaluationPreclinicalHumansMolecular Targeted TherapyOxidation-ReductionOxidative StressSignal Transduction

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Publication Info

Year
2021
Type
review
Volume
20
Issue
9
Pages
689-709
Citations
2407
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

2407
OpenAlex
52
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Cite This

Henry Jay Forman, Hongqiao Zhang (2021). Targeting oxidative stress in disease: promise and limitations of antioxidant therapy. Nature Reviews Drug Discovery , 20 (9) , 689-709. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41573-021-00233-1

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41573-021-00233-1
PMID
34194012
PMCID
PMC8243062

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%