Lee Adam, Ezzeldin Hany, Fourie Jeanne, Diasio Robert
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35294-3300, USA.
Clin Adv Hematol Oncol. 2004 Aug;2(8):527-32.
Through the use of pharmacogenetic studies, interindividual variability in response (efficacy and toxicity) to 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) chemotherapy has been linked to the rate-limiting enzyme in the drug's catabolic pathway, known as dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD). This pharmacogenetic syndrome, known as "DPD deficiency," results in excessive amounts of 5-FU available to be anabolized to its active metabolites and is relatively undetectable by clinical observation prior to 5-FU administration. Extensive studies have associated both profound and partial deficiency in DPD activity with severe, unanticipated toxicity after 5-FU administration, while research on the molecular basis behind DPD deficiency has been linked to various sequence variants of the DPYD gene. Due to the widespread use of 5-FU, the severity of toxicity associated with DPD deficiency, and the prevalence of DPD deficiency in the population, extensive research is continually being performed to develop quick and accurate phenotypic and genotypic assays suitable for clinical settings that would allow clinicians to identify patients susceptible to adverse 5-FU reactions.
通过药物遗传学研究发现,个体对5-氟尿嘧啶(5-FU)化疗的反应(疗效和毒性)差异与该药物分解代谢途径中的限速酶二氢嘧啶脱氢酶(DPD)有关。这种药物遗传学综合征,即“DPD缺乏症”,会导致大量5-FU可被合成其活性代谢物,并且在给予5-FU之前通过临床观察相对难以检测到。大量研究表明,DPD活性的严重缺乏和部分缺乏都与5-FU给药后严重的、意外的毒性有关,而对DPD缺乏症背后分子基础的研究已与DPYD基因的各种序列变异相关联。由于5-FU的广泛使用、与DPD缺乏症相关的毒性严重性以及该人群中DPD缺乏症的患病率,人们不断进行广泛研究,以开发适用于临床环境的快速、准确的表型和基因型检测方法,使临床医生能够识别易发生5-FU不良反应的患者。