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5-FU (Fluorouracil) Toxicity Predictive Test
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Available tests:

5-Fluorouracil Toxicity Detection Assay for Gel Electrophoresis

Reagent Name
Reactions
Product #
DPYD Genotyping ASR Primer Mix
50
EG-DD-010G
DPYD Genotyping Reaction Master Mix
50
EG-DD-011G

5-Fluorouracil Toxicity Detection Assay for Real-Time PCR

Reagent Name
Reactions
Product #
DPYD Genotyping Wild-Type ASR Primer Mix
50
EG-DD-010WR
DPYD Genotyping Mutant ASR Primer Mix
50
EG-DD-010MR
DPYD Genotyping Reaction Master Mix
50
EG-DD-011R

This is a comprehensive predictive test available for assessing the risk of toxicity due to 5-FU based chemotherapy. It detects genetic variants in one gene, DPYD (dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase), that is responsible for a significant portion of serious adverse reactions to 5-FU-based therapy.

List of 5-FU based drugs: Xeloda®, Adrucil®, Efudix®, Carac®, Fluoroblastin®

Xeloda® is the first FDA-approved oral chemotherapy used for treatment of metastatic breast and colorectal cancer. Xeloda® is the inactive form (prodrug) of 5-FU and gets converted to its active form by a naturally occurring enzyme called thymidine phosphorylase, which is highly expressed in tumor cells.

Click here for more safety information on Xeloda®.

FDA label warning. Recent studies have identified a genetic variation in DPYD that correlates with an increased risk of flouorouracil therapy-associated Grade 3-4 toxicity. About 1 in 14 (7%) patients treated with 5-FU develop a Grade 3-4 toxicity (neutropenia, nausea or vomiting, severe diarrhea, and neuropathy). Therefore, the US Food and Drug Administration has revised the labeling requirement for 5-FU based drugs to contain a warning for hypersensitivity in some individuals.

5-FU package insert

Functional role of DPD. Active metabolites of 5-FU inhibit production of thymidine, an essential component of DNA. Thymidine deficiency in proliferating cells (ie. cancer cells) results in inhibition of DNA synthesis and leads to cell death. 
Dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD) is the rate limiting enzyme in catabolism of thymidine and uracil.1 It is also the enzyme responsible for degradation and elimination of >80% of 5-FU.2 Genetic variants that reduce the activity of DPD lead to decreased 5-FU catabolism, resulting in a significant increase in the effective 5-FU dose in the body. Clinical studies have shown that individuals with this polymorphism have a 7-fold increased risk of Grade 3 or 4 toxicity during 5-FU therapy.3 

Reporting. This procedure tests for a guanine to adenine point mutation at the 5’-splice site of DPYD (IVS14+1G>A).

High Risk DPYD IVS14+1G>A mutation detected
Low Risk No mutation detected

Interpretation. Patients in the HIGH RISK group may have up to 7-fold increased risk of developing Grade 3 or 4 5-FU-associated toxicity and should be considered for alternative chemotherapeutic agents or up to a 60% dose reduction for 5-FU, including closer patient monitoring.


Disclaimer
EntroGen provides reagents that are offered to clinical laboratories in order to simplify the development of in-house validated clinical diagnostic tests. Not cleared by FDA for IVD use.

References

  1. Lu  et al., Cancer Res. 1993 Nov 15;53(22):5433-8.
  2. Sulzyc-Bielicka et al., Pharmacol Rep. 2008;60(2):238-42
  3. Raida et al., Clin Cancer Res, 2001; 7:2832–2839

Xeloda® is registered trademark of Roche Pharmaceuticals.