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Vol. 27, Issue 3, 417-421, March 1999
Department of Hematology, Yorkhill NHS Trust, Glasgow (S.M.Y.);
Departments of
Pharmacological Sciences (S.M.Y., D.W., L.M.S.,
S.C., A.K.D.),
Child Health (S.M.Y., M.C., A.D.J.P.),
Statistics
(M.C.), and the
Cancer Research Unit (A.V.B.), The University of
Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom
Fluconazole is increasingly used in children receiving
chemotherapy. Many of these patients are being treated with
cyclophosphamide, which must undergo hepatic metabolism to produce
active alkylating species. As a consequence of the cytochrome P-450
inhibitory properties of fluconazole, a potential interaction exists
between these two agents that could influence the therapeutic effect of
cyclophosphamide. To investigate this interaction, a retrospective case
series of patients was chosen from a population of children with a
previously established profile of cyclophosphamide metabolism.
Twenty-two children who were not receiving other therapy known to
influence drug metabolism were selected and analyzed in terms of
fluconazole treatment; of these, nine were receiving fluconazole and
thirteen were identified as controls. Study design was not randomized. The plasma clearance of cyclophosphamide was lower in patients receiving fluconazole [mean(SD) 2.4(0.71) versus 4.2(1.2)
l/h/m2, p = .001]. In vitro
studies were performed to characterize the interaction between
fluconazole and cyclophosphamide in six human liver microsomes. The
concentration of fluconazole required to reduce the production of
4-hydroxycyclophosphamide to 50% of control values (IC50)
varied between 9 and 80 µM (median 38 µM). Further studies of the
effect of fluconazole on 4-hydroxycyclophosphamide production in vivo
are warranted to determine whether this interaction reduces the
therapeutic effect of cyclophosphamide in clinical practice.
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