DOCTORS'
Medical Case Studies
| Systematic (IUPAC) name | |
|---|---|
| pentyl [1-(3,4-dihydroxy-5-methyltetrahydrofuran-2-yl)-5-fluoro-2-oxo-1H-pyrimidin-4-yl]carbamate | |
| Clinical data | |
| Trade names | Xeloda |
| AHFS/Drugs.com | monograph |
| MedlinePlus | a699003 |
| Pregnancy cat. | D (AU) D (US) |
| Legal status | Prescription Only (S4) (AU) POM (UK) ℞-only (US) |
| Routes | Oral |
| Pharmacokinetic data | |
| Bioavailability | Extensive |
| Protein binding | < 60% |
| Metabolism | Hepatic, to 5'-DFCR, 5'-DFUR (inactive); neoplastic tissue, 5'-DFUR to active fluorouracil |
| Half-life | 38–45 minutes |
| Excretion | Renal 95.5%, faecal 2.6% |
| Identifiers | |
| CAS number | 154361-50-9 |
| ATC code | L01BC06 |
| PubChem | CID 60953 |
| DrugBank | DB01101 |
| ChemSpider | 54916 |
| UNII | 6804DJ8Z9U |
| KEGG | D01223 |
| ChEBI | CHEBI:31348 |
| ChEMBL | CHEMBL1773 |
| Chemical data | |
| Formula | C15H22FN3O6 |
| Mol. mass | 359.35 g/mol |
| SMILES | eMolecules & PubChem |
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Capecitabine (INN) (
/keɪpˈsaɪtÉ™biËn/) (Xeloda, Roche) is an orally-administered chemotherapeutic agent used in the treatment of metastatic breast and colorectal cancers. Capecitabine is a prodrug, that is enzymatically converted to 5-fluorouracil in the tumor, where it inhibits DNA synthesis and slows growth of tumor tissue.[citation needed] The activation of capecitabine follows a pathway with three enzymatic steps and two intermediary metabolites, 5'-deoxy-5-fluorocytidine (5'-DFCR) and 5'-deoxy-5-fluorouridine (5'-DFUR), to form 5-fluorouracil.[citation needed]
Contents |
Capecitabine is FDA-approved for:
In the UK, capecitabine is approved by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) for colon and colorectal cancer, and locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer.[1] On March 29,2007, the European Commission approved Capecitabine, in combination with platinum-based therapy (with or without epirubicin), for the first-line treatment of advanced stomach cancer.
The usual starting dose is 2,500 mg/m2/day in two divided doses, 12 hours apart. One cycle includes two weeks of treatment followed by one week without treatment. Cycles can be repeated every three weeks.
Potential major adverse reactions include:
Capecitabine (as brand-name Xeloda) is available in light peach 150 mg tablets and peach 500 mg tablets.
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