Glucarpidase

Glucarpidase
Clinical data
Trade names Voraxaze (USA)
AHFS/Drugs.com monograph
Routes of
administration
IV
ATC code V03AF09
Legal status
Legal status
Identifiers
CAS Number 9074-87-7
IUPHAR/BPS 7450
ChemSpider none
UNII 2GFP9BJD79 YesY
ECHA InfoCard 100.029.968
Chemical and physical data
Formula C1950H3157N543O599S7 (monomer)
Molar mass 44,017.33 g·mol−1

Glucarpidase (Voraxaze) is an FDA-approved intravenous drug for the treatment of elevated levels of methotrexate (defined as 1 micromol/L) during treatment of cancer patients who have impaired kidney function (and thus cannot reduce the drug to safe levels sufficiently after the drug has been given). Glucarpidase is an enzyme that inactivates methotrexate rapidly after injection. Because this agent reduces systemic levels of methotrexate and could therefore interfere with efficacy, it is not recommended for use in patients with normal or only slightly impaired kidney function or in whom serum levels are normal. The main antidote for methotrexate overdoses prior to the approval of this drug were high doses of folinic acid. However, this agent was not always sufficient at preventing kidney failure due to methotrexate. Glucarpidase also degrades folinic acid so the two should not be used together (within two hours of one another).

Glucarpidase, a recombinant form of the bacterial enzyme carboxypeptidase G2 converts methotrexate into glutamate and 2,4-diamino-N(10)-methylpteroic acid. These are generally much less toxic and are excreted largely by the liver.[1] One case series in children has found that high-dose methotrexate therapy can be resumed after an instance of methotrexate-induced acute kidney injury successfully treated with glucarpidase.[2]

So far adverse effects that have been reported have been mild and include numbness, tingling, flushing, nausea, vomiting, itching, and headache.

References

  1. Green, JM (2012). "Glucarpidase to combat toxic levels of methotrexate in patients". Ther Clin Risk Manag. 8: 403–13. doi:10.2147/TCRM.S30135. PMC 3511185Freely accessible. PMID 23209370.
  2. Christensen, AM; Pauley, JL; Molinelli, AR; et al. (2012). "Resumption of high-dose methotrexate after acute kidney injury and glucarpidase use in pediatric oncology patients". Cancer. 118 (17): 4321–30. doi:10.1002/cncr.27378. PMID 22252903.
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