Fludarabine (Fludara®) is a chemotherapy drug used in the treatment of hematological malignancies.
Uses
Fludarabine is highly effective in the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia, producing higher response rates than
alkylating agents such as
chlorambucil alone
[Rai KR et al. Fludarabine compared with chlorambucil as primary therapy for chronic lymphocytic leukemia. N Engl J Med 2000;343:1750-7. PMID 11114313]. Fludarabine is used in various combinations with
cyclophosphamide,
mitoxantrone,
dexamethasone and
rituximab in the treatment of indolent
non-Hodgkins lymphomas]. As part of the FLAG regimen, fludarabine is used together with cytarabine and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor in the treatment of
acute myeloid leukaemia. Because of its immunosuppressive effects, fludarabine is also used in some conditioning regimens prior to
non myeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplant.
Pharmacology
Fludarabine is a
purine analog, and can be given both orally and intravenously. Fludarabine inhibits DNA synthesis by interfering with ribonucleotide reductase and
DNA polymerase. It is active against both dividing and resting cells.
Adverse effects
Fludarabine is associated with profound lymphopenia, and as a consequence, increases the risk of
opportunistic infections significantly. Patients who have been treated with fludarabine will usually be asked to take
co-trimoxazole or to use monthly nebulised
pentamidine to prevent
pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. The profound lymphopenia caused by fludarabine renders patients susceptible to transfusion-associated graft versus host disease, a fatal complication of
blood transfusion. For this reason, all patients who have ever received fludarabine should only be given
irradiated blood components.
Fludarabine causes anemia, thrombocytopenia and neutropenia, requiring regular blood count monitoring. Some patients require blood and platelet transfusion, or G-CSF injections to boost neutrophil counts.
Fludarabine is associated with the development of severe autoimmune hemolytic anemia in a proportion of patients [Gonzalez H et al. Severe autoimmune hemolytic anemia in eight patients treated with fludarabine. Hematol Cell Ther. 1998;40:113-8. PMID 9698219].
Difficulties are often encountered when harvesting peripheral blood stem cells from patients previously treated with fludarabine [Tournilhac O et al. Impact of frontline fludarabine and cyclophosphamide combined treatment on peripheral blood stem cell mobilization in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Blood 2004;103:363-5. PMID 12969985].
References
External links
Organofluorides | Chemotherapeutic_agents | Fludarabine