5-Fluorouracil (5FU) is widely used to treat solid tumors and is often administered via infusion pump at or near its maximum tolerated dose (MTD). Toxicities and even death can occur in patients over-exposed to 5FU. The use of 2′,3′,5′-tri-O-acetyluridine to treat toxicity due to 5FU is disclosed in WO 93/01202 (Pro-Neuron, Inc.). An improved method of evaluating the severity of 5FU overdoses would be desirable in order to facilitate identification of patients who could benefit from antidote treatment.
This invention provides a method of determining a 5-fluorouracil toxicity severity score for a patient receiving 5-fluorouracil, comprising calculating the square root of the sum of: (a) the square of the logarithm of the dose of 5-fluorouracil administered to the patient; and (b) the square of the logarithm of the administration rate of the 5-fluorouracil to the patient.
This invention is based, in part, on the discovery that 5FU toxicity can be evaluated as a function of dose and infusion rate according to the method of this invention.
The severity score can be represented by the following equation:
Severity Score=[(log Dose)2+(log Rate)2]1/2
The severity score is equivalent to the distance from the origin to the observed point on the plot shown in
ti Severity Score=[(log10 Dose)2+(log10 Rate)2]1/2
In accordance with this invention the dose and the dose rate can be expressed in any units, including all units that are conventional for expressing drug doses and dose rates. In embodiments of this invention the dose of 5-fluorouracil is expressed in units of milligrams (mg) and the rate of 5-fluorouracil administration is expressed in units of milligrams per hour (mg/hr). When the calculation is performed using base ten logarithms, the dose is expressed in units of mg, and the administration rate is expressed in units of mg/hr, then a severity score of 4.5 or higher indicates a lethal dose, and such patients should receive vistonuridine (chemical name: 2′,3′,5′-tri-O-acetyluridine; abbreviation: TAU). Patients having low severity scores do not require vistonuridine. Patients having a severity score in the intermediate range, corresponding to the dark gray area in
5-Fluorouracil Overdose or Overexposure:
5-Fluorouracil (5FU) is widely used for the treatment of solid tumors. Exceeding the absolute dose or infusion rate for a regimen's established maximum tolerated dose (MTD) would be expected to result in serious or life-threatening toxicity. Patients have received 5FU overdoses for various reasons, including: infusion pump malfunction or misprogramming, dose calculation errors, excess or accidental ingestion of oral 5FU sources such as capecitabine or tegafur, or administration of concomitant drugs that impair 5FU degradation. Deficits in 5FU degradation enzymes such as dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD) can cause lethal overexposure at MTD for standard dosing regimens. In the United States about 275,000 cancer patients receive 5FU annually. The U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) estimates that about 3% (8250) of these patients will develop a toxic reaction and more than 1300 patients die each year from 5FU overexposure (Federal Register 73(9):38233, 2008). The symptoms of 5FU overdose typically do not appear for a few days. Therefore the ability to readily identify 5FU overdoses before symptoms of overdose are apparent is desirable.
Pharmacologic Rationale:
Uridine is a specific pharmacologic antidote for 5FU poisoning. It reduces 5FU toxicity when taken up prior to the onset of cell death. However uridine has poor oral bioavailability (about 7%). Vistonuridine (chemical name: 2′,3′,5′-tri-O-acetyluridine) is an oral prodrug of uridine. It is efficiently absorbed since it is more lipophilic than uridine, is not a substrate for uridine phosphorylase, and does not require transporter. Vistonuridine is rapidly converted to circulating uridine by deacetylation (
Clinical Pharmacology:
5FU is anabolized to cytotoxic intracellular intermediates. Fluorouracil triphosphate (FUTP) incorporation into RNA is the primary mechanism of dose-limiting toxicity and is proportional to systemic 5FU exposure (
Kinetics of 5-Fluorouracil:
The kinetics of 5FU are nonlinear as a function of dose. The in vivo concentration of 5FU and its toxic metabolites can increase exponentially in response to linear increases in the dose. As a result, seemingly modest overdoses can have profound toxic effects. For standard bolus regimens, 5FU is administered at lower doses and higher rates. For standard infusion regimens, 5FU is administered at higher doses and lower rates. Because 5FU toxicity, which is directly related to systemic exposure as measured by the area under the plasma concentration multiplied by time curve (AUC=area under the curve), is also a function of both dose and infusion rate, the severity score in accordance with this invention is a useful alternative to determining the AUC. And it is an easier, and therefore generally quicker, means of evaluating exposure to 5FU than determining the AUC.
Methods:
Seventeen patients overdosed with 5FU have been treated with vistonuridine as an antidote. Patients received vistonuridine (10 g q6h for 20 doses) beginning 8 to 96 hours after overdose. Data from 13 patients with similar 5FU overdoses provide the time course and outcomes for patients receiving available supportive care without vistonuridine. A severity score, integrating dose and infusion rate, was calculated for all the patients, and this tool could be used by healthcare workers to determine the expected severity and outcome of a 5FU overdose.
Accidental Overdose Case Reports:
Wellstat Therapeutics Corporation was contacted by physicians of patients who had received 5FU overdoses, most due to infusion pump errors. Emergency Investigational New Drug approvals (INDs) were obtained from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and vistonuridine was promptly shipped or couriered to the clinics. Patients received vistonuridine beginning 8 to 96 hours after 5FU.
Control Patients—Best Supportive Care Only:
Information on doses and outcomes for 5FU overdose cases were obtained from published reports.
Results:
All 17 overdose patients treated with vistonuridine recovered fully, most with relatively modest toxicity. In marked contrast, all 11 of the literature-reported cases of 5FU overdose for which an outcome of death would have been predicted did in fact die from the overdose despite receiving available supportive care. (Table 1 and
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/US2010/034370 | 5/11/2010 | WO | 00 | 12/14/2011 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61177890 | May 2009 | US |