Literature DB >> 1301593

1-Beta-arabinofuranosylcytosine in therapy of leukemia: preclinical and clinical overview.

Y M Rustum1, R A Raymakers.   

Abstract

Although the mechanisms of therapeutic efficacy of cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C) are multifactorial, the pharmacodynamic basis for its cytotoxicity and therapeutic efficacy lies in its intracellular metabolism and the retention of the active metabolite, Ara-C triphosphate (Ara-CTP), which is a competitive inhibitor of DNA polymerase. Additional determinants of tumor cell sensitivity include Ara-CMP incorporation into cellular DNA, the size of the competing normal metabolite, deoxycytidine/5'-triphosphate pool, and the heterogeneity in growth kinetics of tumor cells, S-phase vs cells in other phases of the cell cycle. With high-dose Ara-C, substantial amounts of Ara-CTP are formed in phases of the cell cycle. The presence of high intracellular concentration with prolonged retention of Ara-CTP could lead to the inhibition of cell growth of the cells entering S-phase as a consequence of inhibition of DNA-polymerase and/or incorporation into cellular DNA, resulting in a chain termination. Pharmacokinetically, Ara-C is rapidly eliminated from plasma. In mice, pharmacokinetic parameters of Ara-C are not sufficient predictors for the observed differences in their in vivo antitumor activity. Although these mice were bearing different tumor types (L1210 Ara-C sensitive or P-388 relatively more resistant), the observed differences in tumor response were achieved under identical plasma Ara-C concentrations and area under the concentration time curve. The observed antitumor activity in L1210 cells is primarily associated with higher Ara-CTP pools and retention (T1/2 > 4 hr) in tumor cells as compared with normal bone marrow cells. In the least responsive tumor (P-388), although Ara-CTP pools were sufficiently high, retention of the drug in tumor cells and in normal cells is poor with a T1/2 < 2 hr. Thus, unlike mice bearing leukemia L1210 cells, alteration of the mode and dose of administration of Ara-C in mice bearing P-388 could only result in increased host toxicity with no therapeutic gain. Similarly in patients with acute nonlymphocyte leukemia (ANLL), there is no significant correlation between plasma Ara-C concentration and the intracellular concentrations or retentions of Ara-CTP. In some patients the highest Ara-CTP pools in leukemic myeloblast cells are achieved at a lower level of plasma Ara-C and decrease further with the increase of plasma Ara-C. Thus, in the in vivo model system and in ANLL patients with no prior chemotherapy, Ara-CTP retention is a critical factor associated with response to this agent, in particular its direct association with duration of complete response.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1301593     DOI: 10.1016/0163-7258(92)90022-r

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharmacol Ther        ISSN: 0163-7258            Impact factor:   12.310


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