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Diasio Lab (DPD-Deficiency)

5-Fluorouracil (5-FU): A Cancer Chemotherapy Drug

Although introduced as a chemotherapy agent almost 45 years ago, 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) remains one of the most successful and widely used cancer chemotherapy drugs. 5-FU can be used as a single agent but is typically administered in combination with other drugs for the treatment of a number of different malignancies including carcinomas of the breast, colon, and skin (three of the most frequently occurring cancers). In general, 5-FU is relatively well tolerated at standard doses with typical toxic effects occurring in the gastrointestinal mucosa and bone marrow. Neurologic toxicity presenting as cerebellar ataxia and somnolence occurs much less frequently (<5%). Like many other antineoplastic drugs, 5-FU has a relatively narrow therapeutic window, such that toxicity is likely to increase as the dose is increased. The success of 5-FU has led to several new generation 5-FU-based drugs including Xeloda (Roche) and Tegafur (Taiho).

5-FU: Effects and Toxicity

The anticancer effects and toxicity of 5-FU are directly related to anabolism of the drug to its nucleotides, which can then exert effects through inhibition of thymidylate synthase activity or incorporation into RNA and/or DNA. In humans, more than 85% of an administered dose of 5-FU is degraded through the catabolic pathway. Dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD) is the initial and rate-limiting step in pyrimidine catabolism. Over the last decade, it has become clear that DPD regulates the amount of 5-FU available for anabolism thereby affecting its pharmacokinetics, toxicity, and efficacy.

Unanticipated Toxicity to 5-FU

Several reports have described an inherited (pharmacogenetic) disorder in which individuals with absent or significantly decreased DPD activity develop life-threatening toxicity following exposure to 5-FU. Since the catabolic pathway does not function in DPD deficient patients, administration of standard doses of 5-FU results in altered 5-FU pharmacokinetics and severe toxicity including mucositis, granulocytopenia, neuropathy and death. The cause for this toxicity appears to be decreased drug clearance, resulting in markedly prolonged exposure to 5-FU. It has been estimated that approximately 3-5% of the population has DPD activity less than 95% of the lower limit (<0.064 nmol/min/mg for frozen samples) for the normal population. Recent studies by our laboratory have demonstrated a large over-representation of both profoundly (12 %) and partially (31%) DPD deficient patients who developed unanticipated toxicity following treatment with 5-FU.

Photo of Robert B         Diasio M.D.
"The pharmacogenetic syndrome of DPD deficiency occurs in 3-5% of the general population and has been identified as having a pivotal role in the predisposition dose related to fluoropyrimidine based toxicity in cancer patients. The determination of the molecular causes of variability in DPD activity may allow for minimizing fluoropyrimidine–dose -related toxicity and the future development of individualized pharmacotherapy strategies."

Director
Mayo Clinic Cancer Center

William J. and Charles H. Mayo Professor
Mayo Clinic

Professor of Pharmacology
College of Medicine

Principal Investigator
Molecular Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics

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