Cyclophosphamide

Polyfunctional Alkylating Drugs: Mechanism of Action:

Example: Cyclophosphamide:most useful alkylating agent at present.

  • Alkyl group transfer
    • Major interaction: Alkylation of DNA

Pharmacological Effects: Polyfunctional Alkylating Drugs

  • Injection site damage (vesicant effects) and systemic toxicity.
  •  Toxicity:
    • dose related
    • primarily affecting rapidly dividing cells
      • bone marrow
      • GI tract
        •  nausea and vomiting within less than an hour-- with mechlorethamine, carmustine (BCNU) or cyclophosphamide
        • Emetic effects: CNS
          • reduced by pre-treatment with phenothiazines or cannabinoids.
      • gonads
    •  cyclophosphamide cytotoxicity depends on activation by microsomal enzyme system.
      • Hepatic microsomal P450 mixed-function oxidase catalyzes conversion of cyclophosphamide to the active forms:
        • 4-hydroxycyclophosphamide
        • aldophosphamide
    •  Major Toxicity: bone marrow suppression
      • dose-related suppression of myelopoiesis: primary effects on
        • megakaryocytes
        • platelets
        • granulocytes
      • Bone marrow suppression is worse when alkylating agents are combined with other myelosuppressive drugs and/or radiation (does reduction required)
      • If bone marrow suppression is severe, treatment may have to be suspended and then re-initiated upon hematopoietic recovery.
      • Long-term consequences of alkylating agent treatment include:
        • ovarian failure (common)
        • testicular failure (common)
        • acute leukemia (rare)
  • Oral Route of Administration: cyclophosphamide, melphalan, chlorambucil, busulfan, lomustine (CCNU)