2012年7月8日星期日

Pharmacologic modulation strategies to reduce dose requirements of anticancer therapy while preserving clinical efficacy.

Pharmacologic modulation strategies to reduce dose requirements of anticancer therapy while preserving clinical efficacy.

Future Oncol. 2012 Jun;8(6):731-49

Authors: Zee YK, Goh BC, Lee SC

Abstract
Drug interactions may be exploited to overcome pharmacokinetic issues in order to improve the therapeutic index of a drug, with clinical goals of reducing the dose of the active drug while preserving efficacy or reducing toxicity. This strategy has been used in infectious disease and transplant medicine, and, more recently, in oncology. Pharmacologic modulation strategies range from coadministration of either a drug that inhibits a metabolizing enzyme that would inactivate the drug of interest, a drug that induces an enzyme that activates the drug of interest or a drug that inhibits transporters that affect the uptake or elimination of the drug of interest. This review will discuss pharmacologic modulation strategies that have been tested clinically in order to increase systemic drug exposure. Important examples include ketoconazole inhibition of hepatic CYP3A4 in order to increase systemic exposure to docetaxel, irinotecan and etoposide, and cyclosporine inhibition of intestinal ATP-binding cassette transporters in order to decrease the toxicity of irinotecan and increase the bioavailability of oral docetaxel, paclitaxel and topotecan.

PMID: 22764771 [PubMed - in process]

Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PubMed/22764771?dopt=Abstract

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