Cancer Chemotherapy Flashcards

1
Q

What is mechanism of alkylating agents?

A

Blocks DNA replication and transcription

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2
Q

What are the cytotoxic actions of alkylating agents?

A

Proliferative dependent (except nitrosoureas)

Mainly affect G1 and S phases

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3
Q

How do cells gain resistance to alkylating agents?

A

Decreased permeability or uptake; increased nucleophiles or repair

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4
Q

What is Na-2-Mercaptoethanesulfonate

A

Used to decrease hemorrhagic cystitis produced by acrolein

Reacts with acrolein in urine to detoxify and prevent binding to bladder wall

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5
Q

What are the four alkylating agents?

A

Mechlorethamine

Cyclophosphamide

Chlorambucil

Bendamustine

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6
Q

What is unique about mechlorethamine?

A

It is not excreted

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7
Q

What is mechlorethamine used for?

A

Hodgkins disease

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8
Q

How is cyclophosphamide activated?

A

Activated by cytochrome P450s to active metabolites

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9
Q

What are the unique toxicities of cyclophosphamide?

A

Hemorrhagic cystitis

SIADH

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10
Q

What is Chlorambucil used for?

A

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia

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11
Q

What is the unique toxicity for chlorambucil?

A

Hepatotoxicity

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12
Q

What is the MoA of drugs containing platinum?

A

Binds to guanine in DNA; forms intrastrand crosslinks

Binds extensively to protein

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13
Q

What are the dose-limiting toxicities of platinum drugs?

A

Nephrotoxicity

Peripheral neuropathy

Ototoxicity

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14
Q

What are the anthracyclines and their MoA?

A

Doxorubicin and Daunorubicin

Tight binding between DNA base pairs

Blocks topoisomerase II

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15
Q

What is the unique toxicity of anthracyclines?

A

Cardiotoxicity

Can be prevented by dexrazoxane

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16
Q

What are the uses for anthracyclines?

A

Breast cancer

Sarcoma

MOPP-resistance Hodgkin’s

Carcinomas

17
Q

What is the MoA of mitoxantrone?

A

Binds to DNA to produce drug-DNA-topoisomerase II complexes

Lower incidence of cardiotoxicity

18
Q

What are the epipodophyllotoxins and their MoA?

A

Etoposide and Tenopside

Forms a ternary complex with DNa-topoisomerase

Kills in S and G2 phases

19
Q

What are the uses of epipodophyllotoxins?

A

Tisticular tumors

Small-cell lung cancer

20
Q

What is the MoA of Captothecin analogs?

A

Inhibitors of topoisomerase I

CCS: Act in S phase

21
Q

What are Bleomycins?

A

Combination of several structurally related antibiotics

Most active in G2 phase

22
Q

What are the unique toxicities of Bleomycins?

A

Pulmonaryy gibrosis and pneumonitis

23
Q

What are the uses of bleomycins?

A

Advanced testicular carcinoma

Lymphomas in combination therapy

24
Q

What is the MoA of dactinomycin?

A

Interaction at purine-pyrimidne base pairs of DNA and intercalate between strands

Prevents DNA transcription

25
Q

What are the unique toxicities of dactinomycin?

A

Oral and GI ulceration

Stomatitis

26
Q

What are the uses for dactinomycin?

A

Methotrexate-resistant choriocarcinoma

Wilm’s tumor

Rhabdomyosarcoma

27
Q

What are antimetabolites?

A

Compounds that mimic endogenous biochemicals required for DNA, RNA synthesis or function of enzymes

28
Q

What is the function of methotrexate?

A

Inhibits dihydrofolate reductase

Decreases DNA synthesis

CCS- S phase

29
Q

What is Leucovorin used for?

A

Minimizes the toxid effects of folate depletion in normal cells