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Docetaxel is a pure molecule obtained from the twigs and leaves of Taxus baccata L. This product is used as an anticancer and antimitotic API in the pharmaceutical industry. It has an active content of more than 97%, as determined by HPLC.

Chemical Name: Docetaxel

CAS Number: 114977-28-5

Labeling Claims: Naturally Derived, Plant-Based

Knowde Enhanced TDS

Identification & Functionality

Chemical Name
Pharma & Nutraceuticals Functions
Plant Source

Twig and Leaf

Botanical Origin

Taxus baccata L.

Features & Benefits

Product Overview

The Natural Ally in Fighting Cancer

  • Docetaxel is a taxan, an anticancer agent obtained from the bark of the yew tree. It belongs to a class of chemotherapy drugs called plant alkaloids.
  • The plant's toxic properties have been known since prehistory, when it was identified as the "Tree of Death".
  • In fact, Yew is an example of a plant with medicinal value that can be poisonous if eaten. Just because something is 'natural', it isn't necessarily safe to casually eat or use. In the fall, the bright red berries of the yew are especially attractive. Poisonous parts of the plant include the needles and the seed found inside the berries.
  • In the history, it happened that children have been poisoned by eating berries and adults by brewing tea from the needles. But it was only in the 1960s that taxanes were rediscovered in the US as potential treatment. Today they are widely used as compounds in fighting cancer.
  • In patients with cancer, cell division is no longer controlled as it is in normal tissue. Antimicrotubule agents, such as Docetaxel, inhibit the microtubule structures that are part of the cell's apparatus for dividing and replicating itself. Inhibition of these structures ultimately results in cell death.
Health Benefits

Anticancer, Antimitotic

Applications & Uses

Properties

Typical Properties
ValueUnitsTest Method / Conditions
Assay97.0 - 102.0%HPLC Method