4.5 Article

Dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase activity and the IVS14+1G>A mutation in patients developing 5FU-related toxicity

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 64, Issue 2, Pages 237-240

Publisher

BLACKWELL PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2125.2007.02869.x

Keywords

dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase; fluoropyrimidine; gene polymorphism; pharmacogenetics; toxicity

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What is already known about this subject center dot Dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD) deficiency is known to be a major cause of severe 5FU-related toxicity. center dot A link has been previously shown between 5FU toxicity and either low enzyme activity measured in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PMNC) or germinal DPD mutations. center dot The link between the most common DPD mutation (IVS14+1G > A) and PMNC enzyme activity is poorly documented. What this study adds center dot This paper provides the largest series of case-reports (n = 131) with 5FU-related toxicity, analyzed for both PMNC-DPD activity and the IVS14+1G > A mutation. center dot A very low incidence of the IVS14+1G > A mutation (2.2%) was observed in this selected Caucasian population. center dot Present data suggest that IVS14+1 mutation screening has limited effectiveness in identifying patients at risk for severe 5FU toxicity. Also, patients with normal PMNC-DPD activity may develop life-threatening toxicity. To examine retrospectively the relationship between DPD phenotype/genotype and the intensity of 5FU toxicity. One hundred and thirty-one case-reports (81 women, 50 men) with 5FU-related toxicity were analyzed. The lower the DPD activity (10-504 pmol min(-1) mg(-1)), the higher the toxicity grade was scored (P < 0.01). Toxicity-related deaths occurred in nine patients (eight women) who significantly expressed lower DPD activity than other patients. Two of the deceased patients had normal DPD activity. The IVS14+1G > A mutation, analyzed in 93 patients, was detected in two patients (nonlethal toxicity). The IVS14+1G > A mutation may not help prevent toxicity and patients with normal DPD activity may develop life-threatening 5FU toxicity.

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