Launay Manon, Dahan Laetitia, Duval Manon, Rodallec Anne, Milano Gérard, Duluc Muriel, Lacarelle Bruno, Ciccolini Joseph, Seitz Jean-Francois
Laboratoire de Pharmacocinétique La Timone University Hospital of Marseille, Marseille.
Digestive Oncology Unit, La Timone University Hospital of Marseille, Marseille.
Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2016 Jan;81(1):124-30. doi: 10.1111/bcp.12790. Epub 2015 Nov 28.
5-FU is the backbone of most regimens in digestive oncology. Administration of standard 5-FU leads to 15-30% of severe side effects, and lethal toxicities are regularly reported with fluoropyrimidine drugs. Dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD) deficiency is a pharmacogenetic syndrome responsible for most cases of life-threatening toxicities upon 5-FU intake, and pre-treatment checking for DPD status should help to reduce both incidence and severity of side effects through adaptive dosing strategies.
We have used a simple method for rapidly establishing the DPD phenotype of patients with cancer and used it prospectively in 59 routine patients treated with 5-FU-based therapy for digestive cancers. No patient with total DPD deficiency was found but 23% of patients exhibited poor metabolizer phenotype, and one patient was phenotyped as profoundly deficient. Consequently, 5-FU doses in poor metabolizer patients were cut by an average 35% as compared with non deficient patients (2390 ± 1225 mg vs. 3653 ± 1371 mg, P < 0.003, t-test).
Despite this marked reduction in 5-FU dosing, similar efficacy was achieved in the two subsets (clinical benefit: 40 vs. 43%, stable disease: 40 vs. 37%, progressive disease: 20% in both subsets, P = 0.893, Pearson's chi-square). No difference in toxicities was observed (P = 0.104, Fisher's exact test). Overall, only 3% of early severe toxicities were recorded, a value markedly lower than the 15-30% ones usually reported with 5-FU.
This feasibility study shows how simplified DPD-based adaptive dosing of 5-FU can reduce sharply the incidence of treatment-related severe toxicities while maintaining efficacy as part of routine clinical practice in digestive oncology.
5-氟尿嘧啶(5-FU)是消化肿瘤学中大多数治疗方案的基础药物。标准剂量的5-FU给药会导致15%至30%的严重副作用,且氟嘧啶类药物经常报告有致命毒性。二氢嘧啶脱氢酶(DPD)缺乏是一种药物遗传学综合征,是5-FU摄入后大多数危及生命毒性病例的原因,治疗前检查DPD状态应有助于通过适应性给药策略降低副作用的发生率和严重程度。
我们使用了一种简单的方法来快速确定癌症患者的DPD表型,并将其前瞻性地应用于59例接受基于5-FU治疗的消化癌常规患者。未发现完全DPD缺乏的患者,但23%的患者表现出代谢不良者表型,1例患者表型为严重缺乏。因此,与非缺乏患者相比,代谢不良患者的5-FU剂量平均减少了35%(2390±1225毫克对3653±1371毫克,P<0.003,t检验)。
尽管5-FU剂量显著降低,但两个亚组的疗效相似(临床获益:40%对43%,疾病稳定:40%对37%,疾病进展:两个亚组均为20%,P=0.893,Pearson卡方检验)。未观察到毒性差异(P=0.104,Fisher精确检验)。总体而言,仅记录到3%的早期严重毒性,这一数值明显低于通常报告的5-FU的15%至30%。
这项可行性研究表明,作为消化肿瘤学常规临床实践的一部分,基于DPD的5-FU简化适应性给药如何能大幅降低治疗相关严重毒性的发生率,同时保持疗效。