Indication |
For the topical treatment of multiple actinic or solar keratoses.
In the 5% strength it is also useful in the treatment of superficial
basal cell carcinomas when conventional methods are impractical, such as
with multiple lesions or difficult treatment sites. Fluorouracil
injection is indicated in the palliative management of some types of
cancer, including colon, esophageal, gastric, rectum, breast, biliary
tract, stomach, head and neck, cervical, pancreas, renal cell, and
carcinoid. |
Pharmacodynamics |
Fluorouracil is an antineoplastic anti-metabolite.
Anti-metabolites masquerade as purine or pyrimidine - which become the
building blocks of DNA. They prevent these substances from becoming
incorporated into DNA during the "S" phase (of the cell cycle), stopping
normal development and division. Fluorouracil blocks an enzyme which
converts the cytosine nucleotide into the deoxy derivative. In addition,
DNA synthesis is further inhibited because Fluorouracil blocks the
incorporation of the thymidine nucleotide into the DNA strand. |
Mechanism of action |
The precise mechanism of action has not been fully determined, but
the main mechanism of fluorouracil is thought to be the binding of the
deoxyribonucleotide of the drug (FdUMP) and the folate cofactor,
N5–10-methylenetetrahydrofolate, to thymidylate synthase (TS) to form a
covalently bound ternary complex. This results in the inhibition of the
formation of thymidylate from uracil, which leads to the inhibition of
DNA and RNA synthesis and cell death. Fluorouracil can also be
incorporated into RNA in place of uridine triphosphate (UTP), producing a
fraudulent RNA and interfering with RNA processing and protein
synthesis. |
Absorption |
28-100% |
Volume of distribution |
Not Available |
Protein binding |
8-12% |
Metabolism |
Hepatic |
Route of elimination |
Seven percent to 20% of the parent drug is excreted unchanged in
the urine in 6 hours; of this over 90% is excreted in the first hour.
The remaining percentage of the administered dose is metabolized,
primarily in the liver. |
Half life |
10-20 minutes |
Clearance |
Not Available |
Toxicity |
LD50=230mg/kg (orally in mice) |