Indication |
For reducing the incidence and severity of cardiomyopathy
associated with doxorubicin administration in women with metastatic
breast cancer who have received a cumulative doxorubicin hydrochloride
dose of 300 mg/m^2 and would benefit from continued doxorubicin therapy.
Also approved for the treatment of extravasation from intravenous
anthracyclines. |
Pharmacodynamics |
Dexrazoxane is a cardioprotective agent for use in conjunction
with doxorubicin indicated for reducing the incidence and severity of
cardiomyopathy associated with doxorubicin administration in women with
metastatic breast cancer who have received a cumulative doxorubicin
dose. Patients receiving anthracycline-derivative antineoplastic agents
may experience three types of cardiotoxicity: acute transient type;
chronic, subacute type (related to cumulative dose and has a more
indolent onset later on); and a late-onset type that manifests years
after therapy, mainly in patients that have been exposed to the drug as a
child. Although the exact mechanism of anthracycline-induced
cardiotoxicity is not known, it has shown to exert a variety of actions
that may result in the development of cardiotoxicity. In animals,
anthracyclines cause a selective inhibition of cardiac muscle gene
expression for α-actin, troponin, myosin light-chain 2, and the M
isoform of creatine kinase. This may lead to myofibrillar loss
associated with anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity. Anthracyclines may
also cause myocyte damage via calcium overload, altered myocardial
adrenergic function, release of vasoactive amines, and proinflammatory
cytokines. Furthermore, it has been suggested that the main cause of
anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity is associated with free-radical
damage to DNA. The drugs intercalate DNA, chelate metal ions to produce
drug-metal complexes, and generate superoxide radicals via
oxidation-reduction reactions. Anthracyclines also contain a quinone
structure that can undergo reduction via NADPH-dependent reactions to
produce a semiquinone free radical that initiates a cascade of
superoxide and hydroxide radical generation. Chelation of metal ions,
particularly iron, by anthracyclines results in an anthracycline-metal
complex that catalyzes the generation of reactive oxygen free radicals.
This complex is a powerful oxidant that can initiate lipid peroxidation
in the absence of oxygen free radicals. The toxicity induced by
antrhacyclines may be exacerbated in cardiac cells, as these cells do
not possess sufficient amounts of certain enzymes (e.g., superoxide
dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase) involved in detoxifying
free radicals and protecting the cells from subsequent damage. |
Mechanism of action |
The mechanism by which dexrazoxane exerts its cardioprotective
activity is not fully understood. Dexrazoxane is a cyclic derivative of
EDTA that readily penetrates cell membranes. Results of laboratory
studies suggest that dexrazoxane (a prodrug) is converted
intracellularly to a ring-opened bidentate chelating agent that chelates
to free iron and interferes with iron-mediated free radical generation
thought to be responsible, in part, for anthracycline-induced
cardiomyopathy. It should be noted that dexrazoxane may also be
protective through its inhibitory effect on topoisomerase II. |
Absorption |
IV administration results in complete bioavailability. |
Volume of distribution |
|
Protein binding |
Very low (< 2%) |
Metabolism |
Dexrazoxane is hydrolysed by the enzyme dihydropyrimidine
amidohydrolase in the liver and kidney to active metabolites that are
capable of binding to metal ions. |
Route of elimination |
Urinary excretion plays an important role in the elimination of
dexrazoxane. Forty-two percent of the 500 mg/m2 dose of dexrazoxane was
excreted in the urine. |
Half life |
2.5 hours |
Clearance |
- 7.88 L/h/m2 [dose of 50 mg/m2 Doxorubicin and 500 mg/m2 Dexrazoxane]
- 6.25 L/h/m2 [dose of 60 mg/m2 Doxorubicin and 600 mg/m2 Dexrazoxane]
|
Toxicity |
Intraperitoneal, mouse LD10 = 500 mg/kg. Intravenous, dog LD10 = 2 gm/kg. |
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