Abstract

We investigated single-nucleotide polymorphisms of the cytidine deaminase gene (CDA), which encodes an enzyme that metabolizes gemcitabine, to clarify the relationship between the single-nucleotide polymorphism 208G>A and the pharmacokinetics and toxicity of gemcitabine in cancer patients treated with gemcitabine plus cisplatin. Six Japanese cancer patients treated with gemcitabine plus cisplatin were examined. Plasma gemcitabine and its metabolite 2',2'-difluorodeoxyuridine were measured using an high-performance liquid chromatography method, and the CDA genotypes were determined with DNA sequencing. One patient, a 45-year-old man with pancreatic carcinoma, showed severe hematologic and nonhematologic toxicities during the first course of chemotherapy with gemcitabine and cisplatin. The area under the concentration-time curve value of gemcitabine in this patient (54.54 microg hour/mL) was five times higher than the average value for five other patients (10.88 microg hour/mL) treated with gemcitabine plus cisplatin. The area under the concentration-time curve of 2',2'-difluorodeoxyuridine in this patient (41.58 microg hour/mL) was less than the half of the average value of the five patients (106.13 microg hour/mL). This patient was found to be homozygous for 208A (Thr70) in the CDA gene, whereas the other patients were homozygous for 208G (Ala70). Homozygous 208G>A alteration in CDA might have caused the severe drug toxicity experienced by a Japanese cancer patient treated with gemcitabine plus cisplatin.

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