Chemotherapy Flashcards
What is the purpose of chemotherapy?
Chemotherapy is nothing
more than toxicity with a
purpose: get rid of the
target
What is an ideal chemotherapeutic agent?
It is selectively toxic
Log-kill effect
Drugs kill a constant fraction of cells
rather than a specific number
Which normal cell populations are actively replicating?
e. g. blood, hair, skin, GI mucosa, pregnancy
* Toxicities occur because agents target these normal proliferating cells.*
Give examples of chemotx drugs that are cell cycle specific.
- These inhibit or kill cells only if they are cycling (usually specific stage of cycle)*
- DNA synthesis inhibitors
- mitotic inhibitors
Give examples of chemotx drugs that cell cycle non-specific.
- These work throughout the cell cycle*
- alkylating agents
What are three reasons that drug resistance occurs?
- Due to repetitive therapy
- Acquired or innate
- Mutation or gene expression
Name 6 resistance mechanisms
What is the MOA of methotrexate?
inhibits DNA synthesis by inhibiting
the synthesis of thymidine
MTX blocks DHFR and depletes the cell of tetrahydrofolate, THEREFORE Leads to DNA synthesis inhibition and inhibition of growth
What are important ADME considerations for MTX?
absorption is dose dependent: low better absorbed than high
Toxicities of MTX?
- Bone marrow and GI mucosa
- hepatoxicity with long term lo dose tx
- crystallizes in urine-renal damage
Fluorouracil MOA?
Prodrug
FdUMP- inhibits _DNA _synthesis
FdUTP- inhibits _RNA _function
Also inhibits DNA synthesis by inhibiting the synthesis of thymidine >> Inhibits synthetic
enzyme: thymidylate synthetase
Important ADME for fluorouracil?
Can use topically for actinic keratoses and non-invasive skin cancer.
IV also
RENAL metabolism and excretion
Toxicities of fluorouracil?
- NV
- myelosuppression
- oral and GI ulceration
Hydroxyurea uses
- leukemia
- radiation tx
- inducer of fetal hemoglobin in patients with sickle cell disease