Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: LAPATINIB DITOSYLATE versus SPRYCEL.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: LAPATINIB DITOSYLATE versus SPRYCEL.
LAPATINIB DITOSYLATE vs SPRYCEL
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Reversible tyrosine kinase inhibitor that inhibits ErbB-1 (EGFR) and ErbB-2 (HER2) by binding to the ATP-binding pocket, preventing receptor autophosphorylation and downstream signaling.
Dasatinib is a dual tyrosine kinase inhibitor targeting BCR-ABL, SRC family (SRC, LCK, YES, FYN), c-KIT, EPHA2, and PDGFRβ. It binds to the ATP-binding site of BCR-ABL and inhibits proliferation and induces apoptosis in Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) leukemic cells.
Lapatinib ditosylate 1250 mg orally once daily on days 1-21 continuously, plus capecitabine 2000 mg/m2 orally once daily in 2 divided doses on days 1-14 of a 21-day cycle. Alternatively, 1500 mg orally once daily with letrozole 2.5 mg orally once daily continuously.
100 mg orally once daily, with or without food.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life is 14–24 hours; after repeated dosing, effective half-life is ~24 hours clinically.
Terminal elimination half-life is approximately 3–4 hours for dasatinib, with a longer half-life of 8–10 hours for its active metabolite; clinical context: supports twice-daily dosing.
Fecal (approximately 87% as metabolites, with 3% as parent drug); renal (approximately 3% as metabolites).
Primarily fecal (85%) as unchanged drug and metabolites; renal excretion accounts for <10% of the dose.
Category C
Category C
Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor
Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor