AI Article Synopsis

  • Cytarabine, a crucial chemotherapy drug for treating acute myeloid leukemia (AML), is rendered inactive by a process called deamination, which poses stability challenges for clinical trials.* -
  • A study measured cytarabine stability in blood samples from 14 AML patients and 7 control patients, finding that AML samples had significantly higher cytarabine concentrations and longer degradation times compared to controls.* -
  • Results indicate that cytarabine is more stable in AML samples, and the complex relationship between degradation time and drug concentration in AML may warrant further investigation into its clinical implications and underlying mechanisms.*

Article Abstract

Purpose: Cytarabine, a key chemotherapy agent for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) treatment, is deaminated into inactive uracil-arabinoside by cytidine deaminase. This deamination leads to samples stability issues with respect to clinical pharmacokinetic trials. The aim of our study was to study in vitro cytarabine stability in blood samples obtained from AML patients.

Methods: Cytarabine quantification was performed using a fully validated LC/MS/MS method. In vitro cytarabine stability was assessed at room temperature over 24 h in samples coming from 14 AML patients and 7 control patients (CTRL) with no hematological malignancy. In vitro concentrations versus time data were analyzed using a noncompartmental approach.

Results: Cytarabine in vitro area under the curve (AUC) was 22-fold higher in AML samples as compared to CTRL samples (AML mean (standard deviation (SD)), 51,829 (27,004) h ng/mL; CTRL mean (SD), 2356 (1250) h ng/mL, p = 0.00019). This increase was associated with a prolonged in vitro degradation half-life (t AML mean (SD), 15 (11.8) h; CTRL mean (SD), 0.36 (0.37) h, p = 0.0033). Multiple linear regression analysis showed that AML diagnosis significantly influenced t and AUC relationship.

Conclusion: Cytarabine stability is higher in AML than in CTRL samples. The absence of correlation between t and AUC in AML samples suggests that in vitro cytarabine degradation in AML is complex. These results open perspectives including the evaluation of the clinical relevance and the involved molecular mechanisms.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00280-020-04150-9DOI Listing

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