AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the effectiveness of measuring endogenous plasma uracil (U) and dihydrouracil (DHU) levels, compared to a thymine (THY) challenge test, in predicting severe gastrointestinal toxicity in patients receiving fluoropyrimidine chemotherapy.
  • - Results indicated that while the uracil-based parameters adjusted for renal function showed some predictive value, they had lower sensitivity (29%) compared to the THY challenge test (57%) for identifying patients at risk of severe toxicity.
  • - Additionally, genotyping for DPYD variants was found to be less effective than both tests, with a sensitivity of only 14%, suggesting that measuring endogenous uracil is more reliable than genotyping for toxicity prediction,

Article Abstract

Purpose: Standard dosages of fluoropyrimidine chemotherapy result in severe toxicity in a substantial proportion of patients, however, routine pre-therapeutic toxicity prediction remains uncommon. A thymine (THY) challenge test can discriminate risk of severe gastrointestinal toxicity in patients receiving fluoropyrimidine monotherapy. We aimed to measure endogenous plasma uracil (U) and its ratio to dihydrouracil (DHU), and assess the performance of these parameters compared with the THY challenge test to evaluate risk of severe toxicity.

Methods: Plasma samples, previously collected from 37 patients receiving 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) or capecitabine monotherapy for a THY challenge test (ACTRN12615000586516; retrospectively registered), were assessed for endogenous plasma concentrations of U and DHU using a validated LC-MS/MS method. Renal function was estimated from blood creatinine, and patients with ≥ grade 3 toxicity (CTCAE v4.0) were classified as cases.

Results: There were no differences in median endogenous U plasma concentrations or U/DHU ratios between severe toxicity cases and non-cases. Significant differences between cases and non-cases were noted when these measures were normalised to the estimated renal function (CrCL), U p = 0.0004; U/DHU p = 0.0083. These two parameters had a sensitivity of 29%, compared with 57% for the THY challenge test in the same patients. Genotyping for clinically relevant DPYD variants was inferior to either of these pyrimidine phenotyping tests (sensitivity of 14%).

Conclusions: The endogenous uracil-based parameters, adjusted to CrCL, were more predictive of increased risk of severe fluoropyrimidine toxicity than DPYD genotyping. However, endogenous U measurement detected fewer cases of severe toxicity than the THY challenge test.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00280-021-04240-2DOI Listing

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