Term
5 Major Types of Alkylating Agents |
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Definition
- Nitrogen mustards
- Ethyleneimines
- Alkyl sulfonates
- Nitrosoureas
- Triazenes
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Term
Consequences of Guanine Alkylation by Mechlorethamine |
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Definition
- Binds two DNA strands -- crosslinks DNA
- Alkylation can open the imidazole ring in guanine
- Alkylation can cause stabilization of the enol tautomer of thymine, resulting in three hydrogen bonding sites with guanine --> results in base pair mismatch
- The cell may respond to alkylation by excising the alkylated guanine in an attempt to repair the DNA strand
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Term
Three Important Features of Apoptosis |
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Definition
- Caspases breakdown nucleus membrane and cytoskeleton proteins and activate other factors in apoptosis pathway
- DNA is fragmented by endonucleases
- Cells that have undergone apoptosis are removed by phagocytes
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Term
General Toxicity of Alkylating Agents |
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Definition
Bone Marrow Suppression
- Often dose limiting
- Immune (humoral and cellular) suppression is a consequence dramatically increasing the probability of infection
Mucosal
- Increases risk of bacterial sepsis
CNS
- Emesis through activation of CTZ in CNS
- The cytotoxic effect on GI epithelial cells can also cause emesis days after administration
Carcinogenic
- Some alkylating agents can increase risk of developing leukemia and other types of cancer
- This effect is observed years after therapy
Other
- Less predictable are pulmonary fibrosis, hepatic veno-occlusion, and renal toxicity
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Term
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Definition
- Mechlorethamine
- Cyclophosphamide
- Ifosfamide
- Melphalan
- Chlorambucil
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Term
Of the nitrogen mustards, only ________________ is a strong vesicant |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Uses
ADR
- More gradual myelosuppressive onset
- May cause Acute Myelogenous Leukemia
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Term
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Definition
- Multiple Myeloma
- Epithelial ovarian cancer
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Term
Multiple Myeloma: Diagnostic Criteria |
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Definition
- Increased number of plasma cells (mature B-cells) in the bone marrow
- Bone lesions (caused by inflammation response in bone)
- High serum levels of antibody (usually IgG)
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Term
Mechanism of how Multiple Myeloma causes bone lesions |
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Definition
- Bone lesions are believed to be caused by interaction of plasma cells with bone stromal cells, which results in activation of stromal cells
- The stromal cells in turn activate the osteoclasts which destroy bone
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Term
Cyclophosphamide: Uses, ADRs |
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Definition
Uses
- Leukemia
- Lymphoma
- Multiple Myeloma
- Ovarian cancer
- Breast cancer
- Neuroblastoma
ADRs
- Accumulation of metabolite, Acrolein, in the bladder causes hemorrhagic cystitis --> hydration and adminstration of Mesna reduces hemorrhagic cystitis
- Bladder fibrosis with or without cystitis
- SIADH rare
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Term
What two things help with reducing hemorrhagic cystitis in patients that take Cyclophosphamide? |
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Definition
- Adminstration of Mesna
- Hydration
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Term
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Definition
Uses
- Testicular cancer
- Sarcomas
ADRs
- Accumulation of metabolite, Acrolein, in the bladder causes hemorrhagic cystitis --> hydration and adminstration of Mesna reduces hemorrhagic cystitis
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Term
Mechlorethamine: Uses, ADRs |
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Definition
Uses
ADRs
- Very reactive, vesicant
- Extravasation concern (treat with thiosulfate)
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Term
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Definition
MOA
- Inhibits microtubule polymerization
- Binds to microtubule-binding protein
ADRs
- Has an estrogen moiety, thus has estrogenic activity
- Impotence, gynecomastia, fluid retention
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Term
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Definition
- Effective against resistant cells due to p53 inactivation --> tumor cells use base excision repair as resistance mechanism
- Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
- Indolent B-cell Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma
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Term
Thio TEPA: MOA, Uses, ADRs |
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Definition
MOA
- Potentially tri-functional alkylating agent
- Thought to react with guanine N7 and release free radicals which break the glycosidic bond between base and deoxyribose --> alkylated guanine is release
Uses
- Parent drug directly infused into bladder for bladder cancer treatment
- Ablation of bone marrow before stem cell transplantation
ADRs
- Cross BBB --> neurotoxic side effects
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Term
Altretamine, Hexamethylmelamine: MOA, Uses, ADRs |
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Definition
MOA
- Uncertain --> thought that metabolites (formyl group) may have alkylating activity
Uses
ADRs
- Cytotoxicity attributed to metabolites
- Ataxia
- Mood change
- Confusion
- Dizziness
- Neurotoxic effects are reversible (pyridoxine, a vit B6 derivative may decrease neurotoxic effects, but not thoroughly investigated and it may decrease anti-tumor response)
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Term
Busulfan: MOA, Uses, ADRs |
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Definition
MOA
- Selective for killing myeloid lineage cells
- Intra-strand (not inter) DNA crosslinking observed using virus DNA
- High reactivity with thiols (sulfur stripping) may have therapeutic effect
Uses
- Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia
- Bone Marrow Suppression
ADRs
- Pulmonary fibrosis and liver veno-occlusion at high doses
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Term
Dacarbazine: MOA, Uses, ADRs |
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Definition
MOA
- A triazene
- Adds methyl group to O-6 of guanine which can result in mispairing (G-T)
- Cell cycle non-specific
Uses
- Metastatic Melanoma
- Hodgkin's Disease
ADRs
- Onset of emesis can occur within hours or be delayed by days due to GI epithelial damage
- Myelosuppression common
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Term
How can tumor cells become resistant to Dacarbazine? |
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Definition
O-6-Alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase (AGT), a tumor cell enzyme, can be upregulated which removes the O-6 methylation caused by Dacarbazine |
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Term
If the methyl group at the O-6 position is not removed from guanine by AGT, what can happen to the DNA strand? |
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Definition
- Transversion --> a permanent mutation results (A-T instead of G-C)
- Strand break (the nucleotide on the opposite strand of the methylated G is removed)
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Term
Carmustine and Lomustine: MOA, Uses, Resistance Mechanism |
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Definition
MOA
- Lipophilic enters CNS
- O-6 methylation on guanine
- Parent drug has ability to crosslink DNA
- Carbamoylation of proteins can occur as well
Uses
- Gliadel wafers (carmustine) are effective for brain tumors (gliomas)
Mechanism of Resistance
- Tumor cell produces AGT which removes methyl group on O-6 of guanine
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Term
Alkylation of what specific part of DNA is associated with increased effectiveness of Carmustine? |
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Definition
Promoter region of AGT gene |
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Term
Streptozocin: MOA, Uses, ADRs |
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Definition
MOA
- Glucose moiety enhances uptake of drug into islet cells of the pancreas by GLUT transporter
- The methylnitrosourea moiety alkylates DNA
Uses
- Metastatic islet cell carcinoma
ADRs
- Bone marrow suppression
- Diabetes mellitus (animal models)
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Term
Mechanisms of Resistance to Alkylating Agents |
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Definition
- Increased intracellular concentration of nucleophiles
- Increased production of DNA repair mechanisms (base excision, AGT expression, nucleotide excision less likely)
- Enzymatic drug inactivation (ie, cyclophosphamide by aldehyde dehydrogenase)
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