Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ADRUCIL versus TREXALL.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ADRUCIL versus TREXALL.
ADRUCIL vs TREXALL
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Fluorouracil (5-FU) is a pyrimidine analog that inhibits thymidylate synthase, interfering with DNA synthesis. It is metabolized to its active metabolites, which incorporate into RNA and DNA, causing cytotoxicity primarily in S-phase cells.
Methotrexate is a folate analog that inhibits dihydrofolate reductase, preventing the conversion of folic acid to tetrahydrofolate, thereby inhibiting DNA synthesis, repair, and cellular replication. It also has immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory effects through inhibition of purine and pyrimidine synthesis and release of adenosine.
12 mg/kg IV bolus daily for 4 days, then if no toxicity, 6 mg/kg IV on days 6, 8, 10, and 12; or 15 mg/kg IV weekly; or 500-600 mg/m2 IV every 3-4 weeks.
Oral: 7.5-15 mg once weekly; subcutaneous: 7.5-15 mg once weekly for rheumatoid arthritis; may be increased up to 25-30 mg weekly based on response and tolerability.
None Documented
None Documented
Biphasic elimination: initial t1/2α ~10-20 minutes, terminal t1/2β ~20-24 hours. Accumulation occurs with continuous infusion.
Terminal elimination half-life is 3-10 hours; for high-dose methotrexate, half-life is 8-15 hours. Clinically, monitoring at 24, 48, and 72 hours is standard to guide leucovorin rescue
Primarily hepatic metabolism; renal excretion of metabolites accounts for ~60-80% of the dose. Unchanged fluorouracil excreted renally is <10%. Fecal excretion is minimal (<5%).
Renal excretion of unchanged drug accounts for 80-90% of elimination; biliary/fecal elimination is minor (<10%)
Category C
Category C
Antimetabolite
Antimetabolite