1 / 27

Drug Interactions in Breast Cancer Chemotherapy

Drug Interactions in Breast Cancer Chemotherapy. Sunshine S. Gascon University of Washington School of Pharmacy Doctoral Candidate, 2007 October 26, 2006. BREAST CANCER. Background Chemotherapy Drug interactions Pharmacogenomics GeneMedRx. BREAST CANCER. Statistics 1

kolina
Download Presentation

Drug Interactions in Breast Cancer Chemotherapy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Drug Interactions in Breast Cancer Chemotherapy Sunshine S. Gascon University of Washington School of Pharmacy Doctoral Candidate, 2007 October 26, 2006

  2. BREAST CANCER • Background • Chemotherapy • Drug interactions • Pharmacogenomics • GeneMedRx

  3. BREAST CANCER Statistics1 • Most prevalent type in women (31%) • Median age – 40yo • Incidence – 210,000 new cases • Mortality – 71,000 women (33%) Treatment options • Surgery • Radiation therapy • Chemotherapy 1American Cancer Society 2006 http://www.cancer.org/docroot/STT/content/STT_1x_Cancer_Facts__Figures_2006.asp

  4. CHEMOTHERAPY POLYPHARMACY • Chemotherapy Agents • Cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan) • Doxorubicin (Adriamycin) • Paclitaxel (Taxol) • Tamoxifen (Nolvadex) • Trastuzumab (Herceptin) • Side effects • Nausea/vomiting – antiemetics (Zofran, Reglan, Emend) • Anemia – growth factors (Epogen, Procrit) • Immunocompromised – antibiotics, antifungals • Pain – opiod analgesics (hydrocodone, oxycodone)

  5. CHEMOTHERAPY POLYPHARMACY • Other Medical Conditions • Age related – birth control, menopause, osteoporosis • Arthritis – NSAIDS, etanercept (Enbrel) • Cardiovascular – hypertension, arrhythmias • Anticoagulants – warfarin • Endocrine – diabetes, hyperlipidemia • Epilepsy – phenytoin, carbamazepine • HIV/AIDS – NRTIs, PIs • SSRIs Chemotherapy regimens can be numerous, allowing for many potential adverse drug interactions.

  6. DRUG INTERACTIONS CHEMO DRUG Efficacy Toxicity CHEMO-RELATED DRUG NON-CANCER RELATED DRUG

  7. DRUG INTERACTIONS • Chemo + Chemo • paclitaxel + doxorubicin = cardiotoxicity • trastuzumab + cyclo/dox = cardiotoxicity • Chemo + Chemo-related • cyclophosphamide + aprepitant = ↓ chemo efficacy • Chemo + Other • doxorubicin + digoxin = ↓ digoxin effects • tamoxifen + warfarin = ↑ warfarin effects

  8. CHEMOTHERAPY METABOLISM Bold = major pathway Cozza et al. Drug Interaction Principles. 2003 ed Hansten & Horn. Top 100 Drug Interactions. 2006 ed Lexi-comp. Drug Information Handbook. 12th ed Scripture CD, Figg WD. Nature 2006(6);546-559.

  9. DRUG INTERACTIONS • Paclitaxel + Doxorubicin • Randomized, cross-over study in metastatic breast cancer patients2 • Paclitaxel given before doxorubicin decreases dox Cl • Leads to increased side effects (SEs) • Mechanism – PK interaction (3A4, pGP competition) • Mgmt – doxorubicin 24hrs prior to paclitaxel 2Holmes et al. J Clin Oncol 1996 (14):2713-2721

  10. DRUG INTERACTIONS • Chemotherapy + Trastuzumab • Randomized, controlled, phase III clinical trial in metastatic breast cancer patients3 • Trastuzumab increased response • Longer time to disease progression (7.4 vs 4.6 months) • Longer survival time (25.1 vs 20.3 months) • Reduction in death risk (20%) • Increased cardiac dysfunction 3Slamon et al. NEJM 2001 (344)11; 783-792.

  11. DRUG INTERACTIONS • Chemotherapy + Trastuzumab (cont’d) • Mechanism • Proposed: Her2 expression in cardiac tissues • Prevailing: Cyclo/Dox cause cardiac tissue damage, • Trastuzumab impairs cellular repair time • Currently unknown PD interaction • Mgmt • Risk:benefit assessment • Cardiac monitoring (baseline, every three months) 3Slamon et al. NEJM 2001 (344)11; 783-792.

  12. DRUG INTERACTIONS • Cyclophosphamide + Aprepitant • Cyclophosphamide4 • Effective anti-tumor agent • Prodrug bioactivation (via CYP3A4 to 4-OH-cyclophosphamide) • Autoinducer • High emetogenic potential • Aprepitant (Emend) • Effective for acute and delayed emesis • Dosing 1hr prior to several days post-chemo • CYP3A4 substrate, inhibitor (moderate) 4de Jonge et al. Clinical Pharmacokinetics. 2005(44)11; 1135-1164

  13. DRUG INTERACTIONS • Cyclophosphamide + Aprepitant (cont’d) • Clinical trial5 • Co-administration (n=6) compared to reference group (n=49) • Measured cyclophosphamide & metabolite levels • Reduction in 4-OH-cyclophosphamide (5%) • Reduction in enzyme induction (7%) • Less nausea/vomiting with aprepitant (0.5 vs 4.8 days) • Mechanism • Aprepitant inhibits CYP3A4  decreased bioactivation of cyclophosphamide • Mgmt • Monitor for unexpected lack of anti-tumor response • Modify chemo regimen as necessary • Caution with use of other 3A4 inhibitors (antibiotics, antifungals) 5de Jonge et al. Cancer Chemotherapy & Pharmacology 2005. 56(4):370-378

  14. DRUG INTERACTIONS • Chemotherapy + Digoxin • Chemotherapy • Inhibits growth of rapidly dividing cells • Affects epithelial cells, hair follicle cells • Alter GI mucosa lining  alter absorption • Digoxin • Effective use in heart failure, arrhythmias • Strengthens heart contractions • Therapeutic serum levels 0.8- to 2ng/ml

  15. DRUG INTERACTIONS • Chemotherapy+ Digoxin (cont’d) • Clinical trial6 • Patients (n=6) receiving digoxin before & after chemotherapy. • Results: Digoxin AUC decreased by nearly 55% • (31.8 –vs– 17.4 ng*hr/ml) • Mechanism – cytotoxic effects of chemotherapy alters GI absorption of digoxin. • Mgmt • Monitor for unexpected lack of response to digoxin • Monitor digoxin levels • Adjust digoxin dose accordingly 6Bjornnson et al. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 1986 Jan;39(1):25-8

  16. DRUG INTERACTIONS • Tamoxifen + Warfarin • Tamoxifen • Selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM) • Effect for breast cancer prevention & treatment • Metabolized primarily by CYP 2D6, 3A4 • Warfarin • Oral anticoagulant • Effective for stroke, DVT/PE prophylaxis • Narrow therapeutic window (usual INR 2-3) • Metabolized primarily by CYP 2C9, 3A4 Cozza et al. Drug Interaction Principles. 2003 ed

  17. DRUG INTERACTIONS • Tamoxifen + Warfarin (cont’d) • Clinical evidence • Several case reports • 65yo woman stabilized on warfarin (x11yrs)  increased PT time • (required 40% dose reduction) • Woman stabilized on 25mg/d warfarin  subdural hematoma • Mechanism • Proposed mechanism: plasma protein-binding displacement • warfarin – 99% bound • tamoxifen – 99% bound • Management • Close PT/INR monitoring • Adjust warfarin dose accordingly Morello et al. Clinical Pharmacokinetics 2003. 42(4);361-372

  18. DRUG INTERACTIONS Most drug interactions are manageable (monitoring, dose reduction, dose timing), indicating the importance of a central source for drug interaction information.

  19. PHARMACOGENOMICS • Tamoxifen and CYP2D6 • Tamoxifen • SERM (selective estrogen receptor modulator) • Estrogen receptor (ER) antagonist in breast  inhibits cell growth • Effective use in ER (+) tumors • Metabolism to active metabolite via CYP2D6 • SEs: menopausal symptoms (night sweats, hot flashes)

  20. PHARMACOGENOMICS • Tamoxifen and CYP2D6 (cont’d) • ENDOXIFEN: • 100x receptor affinity • 100x potency • Effect of CYP2D6 polymorphisms on Tamoxifen response???

  21. PHARMACOGENOMICS • Tamoxifen and CYP2D6 (cont’d) • Clinical study7 • Breast cancer women (n=223) received tamoxifen (x5yrs) post-tumor removal • Genotyped for CYP2D6 • WT/WT (72.1%) – Extensive Metabolizer • WT/*4 (21.1%) – Intermediate metabolizer • *4/*4 ( 6.8 %) – Poor metabolizer • Endpoints • Disease-free time • Overall survival • Hot flashes 7Goetz et al. Journal of Clinical Oncology 2005(23)36; 9312-9318

  22. PHARMACOGENOMICS • Tamoxifen and CYP2D6 (cont’d) • Clinical study8 • Results • CYP 2D6*4/*4 shown to have shorter time to disease recurrence • CYP 2D6*4/*4 genotypes did not experience hot flashes • (non-*4/*4 had >20%) • Genetic variations in CYP2D6 alleles are associated with differences in clinical responses to treatment. • Knowledge of genotype may be helpful in choice of treatment regimens. 8Goetz et al. Journal of Clinical Oncology 2005(23)36; 9312-9318

  23. GeneMedRx • Drug interactions database • Pharmacokinetic • Pharmacodynamic • Pharmacogenomic • Clincial evidence (trials, case-reports) • Potential drug interactions • Knowledge of drug interactions allows practitioners to: • Optimize patient’s medication management • Monitor efficacy and toxicity • Modify dose, administration, drug selection • Achieve goals: • Improve drug safety and efficacy • Improve patient response & quality of life

  24. Thank You a BIG thanks to everyone at

  25. QUESTIONS ???

  26. References • American Cancer Society 2006 • http://www.cancer.org/docroot/STT/content/STT_1x_Cancer_Facts__Figures_2006.asp • Baker AF, Dorr RT. Drug interactions with the taxanes: clinical implications. Cancer Treatment Reviews 2001(27); 221-233 • Bjornnson TD, Huang AT, Roth P, Jacob DS, Christenson R. Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics 1986. 39(1):25-28 • Cozza KL, Armstrong SC, Oesterheld JR. Drug Interaction Principles 2003. 2nd edition • De Jonge ME, Huitem AD, Holtkamp MJ, Van Dam SM, Beijnen JH, Rodenhuis S. Aprepitant inhibits cyclophosphamide bioactivation and thiotepa metabolism. Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology 2005. 56(4); 370-378. • De Jonge ME, Huitema AD, Beijnen JH. Clinical pharmacokinetics of cyclophosphamide. Clinical Pharmacokinetics 2005. 44(11);1135-1164. • Goetz MP, Rae JM, Suman VJ, Safgren SL, Ames MM, Visscher DW, Reynolds C, Couch FJ, Lingle WL, Flockhar DA, Desta Z, Perez EA, Ingle JN. Pharmacogenetics of tamoxifen biotransformation is associated with clinical outcomes of efficacy and hot flashes. Journal of Clinical Oncology 2005. 23(36); 9312-9318. • Hansten PD, Horn JR. Top 100 Drug Interactions 2006

  27. References • Holmes FA, Madden T, Newman RA, Valero V, Theriault RL, Fraschini G, Walters RS, Booser DJ, Buzdar AU, Wiley J, Hortobagyi GN. Sequence-dependent alteration of doxorubicin pharmacokinetics by paclitaxel in a phase I study of paclitaxel and doxorubicin in patients with metastatic breast cancer. Journal of Clinical Oncology 1996. 14(10); 2713-2721. • Lexi-comp. Drug Information Handbook 2003. 12th edition • Lodwick R, McConkey B, Brown AM. Life threatening interaction between tamoxifen and warfarin. British Journal of Medicine 1987. 295(6606);1141 • Morello KC, Wurz GT, DeGregorio MW. Pharmacokinetics of selective estrogen receptor modulators. Clinical Pharmacokinetics 2003. 42(4); 361-372 • Slamon DJ, Leyland-Jones B, Shak S, Fuchs H, Paton V, Bajamonde A, Fleming T, Eiermann W, Wolter J, Pegram M, Baselga B, Norton L. Use of chemotherapy plus a monoclonal antibody against Her2 for metastatic breast cancer that overexpresses Her2. New England Journal of Medicine 2001. 344(11); 783-792. • Scripture CD, Figg WD. Drug interactions in cancer therapy. Nature 2006. (6);546-559.

More Related