Seydoux Claire, Briki Myriam, Wagner Anna D, Choong Eva, Guidi Monia, Carrara Sandro, Thoma Yann, Livio Françoise, Girardin François R, Marzolini Catia, Buclin Thierry, Decosterd Laurent A
Service and Department of Internal Medicine, Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Service and Laboratory of Clinical Pharmacology, Department of Internal Medicine and Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Chemotherapy. 2025;70(2):92-101. doi: 10.1159/000542461. Epub 2024 Nov 7.
Despite major advances in cancer treatment in the past years, there is a need to optimize chemotherapeutic drug dosing strategies to reduce toxicities, suboptimal responses, and the risk of relapse. Most cancer drugs have a narrow therapeutic index with substantial pharmacokinetics variability. Yet, current dosing approaches do not fully account for the complex pathophysiological characteristics of the patients. In this regard, the effect of sex on anticancer chemotherapeutic drugs' disposition is still underexplored. In this article, we review sex differences in chemotherapeutic drug pharmacokinetics; we suggest a novel approach that integrates sex into the traditional a priori body surface area (BSA) dosing selection model, and finally, we provide an overview of the potential benefits of a broader use of therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) in oncology.
To date, anticancer chemotherapeutic drug dosing is most often determined by BSA, a method widely used for its ease of practice, despite criticism for not accounting for individual factors, notably sex. Anatomical, physiological, and biological differences between males and females can affect pharmacokinetics, including drug metabolism and clearance. At equivalent doses, females tend to display higher circulating exposure and more organ toxicities, which has been formally demonstrated at present for about 20% of chemotherapeutic drugs. An alternative could be the sex-adjusted BSA (SABSA), incorporating a 10% increase in dosing for males and a 10% decrease for females, though this approach still lacks formal clinical validation. Another strategy to reduce treatment-related toxicity and potentially enhance clinical outcomes could be a more widespread use of TDM, for which a benefit has been demonstrated for 5-fluorouracil, busulfan, methotrexate, or thiopurines.
The inclusion of sex besides BSA in an easy-to-implement formula such as SABSA could improve a priori chemotherapy dosing selection, even though it still requires clinical validation. The a posteriori use of TDM could further enhance treatment efficacy and safety in oncology.
尽管在过去几年癌症治疗方面取得了重大进展,但仍需要优化化疗药物给药策略,以减少毒性、次优反应和复发风险。大多数癌症药物的治疗指数较窄,药代动力学变异性很大。然而,目前的给药方法并未充分考虑患者复杂的病理生理特征。在这方面,性别对抗癌化疗药物处置的影响仍未得到充分研究。在本文中,我们综述了化疗药物药代动力学中的性别差异;我们提出了一种将性别纳入传统先验体表面积(BSA)给药选择模型的新方法,最后,我们概述了在肿瘤学中更广泛使用治疗药物监测(TDM)的潜在益处。
迄今为止,抗癌化疗药物的给药通常由BSA决定,这是一种因其操作简便而被广泛使用的方法,尽管有人批评它没有考虑个体因素,尤其是性别。男性和女性之间的解剖学、生理学和生物学差异会影响药代动力学,包括药物代谢和清除。在等效剂量下,女性往往表现出更高的循环暴露水平和更多的器官毒性,目前约20%的化疗药物已正式证实了这一点。一种替代方法可能是性别调整后的BSA(SABSA),男性给药增加10%,女性给药减少10%,不过这种方法仍缺乏正式的临床验证。另一种降低治疗相关毒性并可能改善临床结果的策略可能是更广泛地使用TDM,对于5-氟尿嘧啶、白消安、甲氨蝶呤或硫嘌呤已证明了其益处。
在诸如SABSA这样易于实施的公式中除了BSA之外纳入性别因素可以改善先验化疗给药选择,尽管它仍需要临床验证。TDM的事后使用可以进一步提高肿瘤学治疗的疗效和安全性。