Principles of systemic anti-cancer therapy Flashcards

• Be aware of the role of systemic anti-cancer treatment in the management of malignant disease • Be familiar with the types of systemic anti-cancer treatments • Know how systemic cancer treatment is prescribed and the steps involved in clinical verification by a pharmacist.

1
Q

List the main types of cancer therapy.

A
Surgery
Hormone therapy
Radiotherapy
Systematic anti-cancer therapy
- cytotoxic chemo
- biological therapy (targeted or immunotherapy)
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2
Q

What are the 2 main factors that influence the growth rates of tumours?

A
  • Type of cancer

- Stage of disease

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3
Q

what is the difference in DOUBLING TIME between acute leukaemia and breast cancer?

A

Acute leukaemia 2 weeks vs breast cancer 2-4 months

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4
Q

Characteristics of presence of malignancy (cancer)?

A

Doubling time of 30
1-2 cm mass, 1 g
10^9 cells

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5
Q

Lethal solid tumour mass volume?

A

1 x 10^12 cells

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6
Q

What are the implications of chemotherapy given to sensitive cells ?

A
  • Cell death (with repeated administration)
  • Tumour burden may reduced to undetectable levels (under 10^9 cells)
  • NORMAL immunosurveillance can achieve a cure in sensitive cells
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7
Q

What are the 4 ways chemotherapy can be used?

A

Curative
Adjuvant
Neoadjuvant
Palliative

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8
Q

WHEN and WHY is an ADJUVANT used in chemo?

A

WHEN: Given after definite treatment (surgery/radiotherapy)

WHY: To improve cure rate and eradicate metastasis

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9
Q

WHEN and WHY is a NEOADJUVANT used in chemo?

A

WHEN: Given prior to definite treatment

WHY: To aid/facilitate the procedure, improve cure rate
Sometimes to shrink large tumours to make it more operable

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10
Q

WHY palliative chemo used ?

A

Used to control symptoms and improve QoL

doesn’t always prolong life but can in some cases

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11
Q

Prescribing of cancer drugs

A

Prescribed in cycles

  • Usually 3-4 weeks per cycle
  • May all be given on day 1 or can
    be given at different time points within
    the cycle
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12
Q

Advantages of oral chemotherapy?

A
  • More convenient for patient
  • Less toxicity
  • it’s cheaper (most cases, depends on drug)
  • Avoids complications of IV access
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13
Q

Disadvantages of oral chemotherapy?

A
  • Adherence
  • Variable pharmacokinetic profie (PK)
  • More management of drug interactions
  • Nausea and vomitting
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14
Q

How are doses calculated for cancer drugs?

A
  • Using BSA
  • Many hospital trusts using Dose Banding

TDM (therapeutic dose monitoring - measures conc. of drug in the bloodstream) not routinely carried out

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15
Q

In terms of metabolism and excretion , how does patient variability vary in terms of the drug?

A
  • Varying levels of oral absorption
  • Renal and hepatic function
  • Genetic differences
  • Drug interactions (taking a combo of diff meds)
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16
Q

Key 2 principles in monitoring for cancer drugs ?

A
  1. Measure response
    - Tumour markers
    - Imaging
  2. Monitor toxicity
    - U&Es (renal and LFTs)
    - FBC
    - Weight
    - Toxicity/symptom review
17
Q

Where do biological therapies derive from? What are examples of biological therapies?

A

Use substances derived from living organisms or laboratory-synthesised versions of the substance

E.g. monoclonal antibodies (mAb) 
       Cancer vaccines
       Cancer growth blockers
       Immunotherapy 
       Gene therapy
18
Q

List the mechanisms of action for targeted therapies

A

Induce immune response
Induce apoptosis

Inhibit angiogenesis
Inhibit cancer cell growth
Inhibit hormone dependent growth

Release cytotoxic agents at site of action

19
Q

What is the major obstacle of curing cancer with drugs ?

A

Drug resistance

3 types: Intrinsic
Acquired
Cross resistance

20
Q

What standards are used for Clinical Pharmacy Verification of systemic anticancer therapy ?

A

BOPA standards

British Oncology Pharmacy Association