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      Non-targeted Drugs for Cancer Therapy

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          Abstract

          In a 2017 analysis, 61 of 150 anticancer drugs approved by the FDA were classified as cytotoxic and 89 as targeted drugs. For many years, cytotoxic compounds have been the front line of cancer chemotherapy, but their action of destroying rapidly dividing cancer and healthy cells in the gut, bone marrow, and hair follicles causes undesirable side effects like mucositis, stomatitis, myelosuppression, and alopecia. Hypersensitivities commonly occur. Drugs with high potential to provoke hypersensitivity are platinum compounds, taxanes, epipodophyllotoxins, L-asparaginase, and procarbazine. Those with low potential include the anthracyclines. Drugs only occasionally implicated include cyclophosphamide and methotrexate. Immediate type I allergic reactions are few with L-asparaginase, the platinum salts, and methotrexate most often implicated. Type II hypersensitivities are thrombocytopenia, drug-induced neutropenia, and drug-induced anemia. Small-vessel vasculitis is the most frequently seen form of a type III reaction. Hypersensitivity pneumonitis is a combined type III and type IV hypersensitivity. Drug-induced liver injury may occur, and drug-induced lung disease may be due to drug-specific antibodies or drug-specific T cells. Drug-induced cutaneous reactions include maculopapular exanthemas, allergic contact dermatitis, psoriasis, AGEP, DRESS, fixed drug eruptions, erythema multiforme, SJS, and TEN. A variety of other cutaneous and mucocutaneous reactions associated with chemotherapy include stomatitis and mucositis, acral erythema, neutrophilic eccrine hidradenitis, eccrine squamous syringometaplasia, extravasation reactions, and radiation-associated reactions. For the prevention of allergic reactions, three strategies are generally employed: premedication, skin testing, and desensitization. Up to 30% of patients have been found to develop acute infusion reactions to the taxanes; rapid desensitization protocols have been developed for both drugs. Three platinum drugs, cisplatin, carboplatin, and oxaliplatin are often used in chemotherapy. Reactions to platinum agents are mainly type I or type IV hypersensitivities; IgE antibodies reactive with carboplatin and oxaliplatin have been detected. Skin testing with the three platinum drugs is now finding widespread acceptance and application as a routine diagnostic procedure. A number of different desensitization protocols for the platinum drugs are currently employed.

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          Cellular processing of platinum anticancer drugs.

          Cisplatin, carboplatin and oxaliplatin are platinum-based drugs that are widely used in cancer chemotherapy. Platinum-DNA adducts, which are formed following uptake of the drug into the nucleus of cells, activate several cellular processes that mediate the cytotoxicity of these platinum drugs. This review focuses on recently discovered cellular pathways that are activated in response to cisplatin, including those involved in regulating drug uptake, the signalling of DNA damage, cell-cycle checkpoints and arrest, DNA repair and cell death. Such knowledge of the cellular processing of cisplatin adducts with DNA provides valuable clues for the rational design of more efficient platinum-based drugs as well as the development of new therapeutic strategies.
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            Chemotherapy-induced neutropenia: risks, consequences, and new directions for its management.

            Cytotoxic chemotherapy suppresses the hematopoietic system, impairing host protective mechanisms and limiting the doses of chemotherapy that can be tolerated. Neutropenia, the most serious hematologic toxicity, is associated with the risk of life-threatening infections as well as chemotherapy dose reductions and delays that may compromise treatment outcomes. The authors reviewed the recent literature to provide an update on research in chemotherapy-induced neutropenia and its complications and impact, and they discuss the implications of this work for improving the management of patients with cancer who are treated with myelosuppressive chemotherapy. Despite its importance as the primary dose-limiting toxicity of chemotherapy, much concerning neutropenia and its consequences and impact remains unknown. Recent surveys indicate that neutropenia remains a prevalent problem associated with substantial morbidity, mortality, and costs. Much research has sought to identify risk factors that may predispose patients to neutropenic complications, including febrile neutropenia, in an effort to predict better which patients are at risk and to use preventive strategies, such as prophylactic colony-stimulating factors, more cost-effectively. Neutropenic complications associated with myelosuppressive chemotherapy are a significant cause of morbidity and mortality, possibly compromised treatment outcomes, and excess healthcare costs. Research in quantifying the risk of neutropenic complications may make it possible in the near future to target patients at greater risk with appropriate preventive strategies, thereby maximizing the benefits and minimizing the costs. Copyright 2003 American Cancer Society.
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              The tumor lysis syndrome.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                babaldo@iinet.net.au
                hnpham36@yahoo.com
                Journal
                978-3-030-51740-3
                10.1007/978-3-030-51740-3
                Drug Allergy
                Drug Allergy
                Clinical Aspects, Diagnosis, Mechanisms, Structure-Activity Relationships
                978-3-030-51739-7
                978-3-030-51740-3
                09 December 2020
                : 645-682
                Affiliations
                [3 ]GRID grid.412703.3, ISNI 0000 0004 0587 9093, Royal North Shore Hospital of Sydney Head, Molecular Immunology Unit, Kolling Institute of Medical Research and University of Sydney, ; Sydney, NSW Australia
                [4 ]GRID grid.412703.3, ISNI 0000 0004 0587 9093, Royal North Shore Hospital of Sydney, Molecular Immunology Unit, Kolling Institute of Medical Research and University of Sydney, ; Sydney, NSW Australia
                Article
                15
                10.1007/978-3-030-51740-3_15
                7979052
                5ba83cca-abdb-4e76-bece-8784e80d4902
                © Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2021

                This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.

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                © Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2021

                adverse reactions chemotherapeutics,adverse reactions anticancer drugs,hypersensitivity to chemotherapeutics,drug-induced thrombocytopenia,drug-induced hemolytic anemia,drug-induced hypersensitivity vasculitis,drug-induced hypersensitivity liver injury,drug-induced hypersensitivity lung disease,acral erythema,stomatitis,mucositis,taxane hypersensitivity,paclitaxel hypersensitivity,platinum drug hypersensitivity,desensitization platinum drugs

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