Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ARRANON versus LONSURF.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ARRANON versus LONSURF.
ARRANON vs LONSURF
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Purine nucleoside analog; after intracellular phosphorylation to ara-GTP, it incorporates into DNA, inhibits DNA synthesis, and induces apoptosis in T-cell progenitors.
LONSURF (trifluridine and tipiracil) is a combination of the thymidine-based nucleoside analogue trifluridine and the thymidine phosphorylase inhibitor tipiracil. Trifluridine incorporates into DNA and inhibits cell proliferation, while tipiracil increases trifluridine exposure by inhibiting its degradation by thymidine phosphorylase.
2600 mg/m2 intravenously over 2 hours on days 1, 3, and 5, repeated every 28 days.
Adults: 35 mg/m2 orally twice daily on days 1-5 and 8-12 of each 28-day cycle.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life of nelarabine is approximately 30 minutes; the active metabolite ara-G has a terminal half-life of approximately 20-24 hours. Clinically, this supports daily dosing in cycles.
Trifluridine: terminal half-life approximately 1.4-2.1 hours; tipiracil: terminal half-life approximately 2-3 hours. Clinical context: short half-lives necessitate twice-daily dosing on Days 1-5 and 8-12 of a 28-day cycle.
Nelarabine is extensively metabolized to ara-G; elimination is primarily renal: ~27% as parent drug and 30-50% as ara-G in urine. Fecal excretion accounts for <5% of administered dose.
Primarily renal: tipiracil is excreted unchanged in urine (approximately 50% of dose); trifluridine is eliminated via metabolism and renal excretion (as metabolites and unchanged drug). Fecal elimination accounts for <3% of total clearance.
Category C
Category C
Antineoplastic
Antineoplastic