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Comparison of 4 Screening Methods for Detecting Fluoropyrimidine Toxicity Risk: Identification of the Most Effective, Cost-Efficient Method to Save Lives

Authors :
Olivier Capitain
Valérie Seegers
Jean-Philippe Metges
Roger Faroux
Claire Stampfli
Marc Ferec
Tamara Matysiak Budnik
Hélène Senellart
Valérie Rossi
Nadège Blouin
Jonathan Dauvé
Mario Campone
Source :
Dose-Response, Vol 18 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
SAGE Publishing, 2020.

Abstract

Background: Fluoropyrimidines (FPs) carry around 20% risk of G3-5 toxicity and 0.2-1% risk of death, due to dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD) deficiency. Several screening approaches exist for predicting toxicity, however there is ongoing debate over which method is best. This study compares 4 screening approaches. Method: 472 patients treated for colorectal, head-and-neck, breast, or pancreatic cancers, who had not been tested pre-treatment for FP toxicity risk, were screened using: DPYD genotyping (G); phenotyping via plasma Uracil (U); phenotyping via plasma-dihydrouracil/uracil ratio (UH 2 /U); and a Multi-Parametric Method (MPM) using genotype, phenotype, and epigenetic data. Performance was compared, particularly the inability to detect at-risk patients (false negatives). Results: False negative rates for detecting G5 toxicity risk were 51.2%, 19.5%, 9.8% and 2.4%, for G, U, UH 2 /U and MPM, respectively. False negative rates for detecting G4-5 toxicity risk were 59.8%, 36.1%, 21.3% and 4.7%, respectively. MPM demonstrated significantly (p < 0.001) better prediction performance. Conclusion: MPM is the most effective method for limiting G4-5 toxicity. Its systematic implementation is cost-effective and significantly improves the risk-benefit ratio of FP-treatment. The use of MPM, rather than G or U testing, would avoid nearly 8,000 FP-related deaths per year globally (500 in France), and spare hundreds of thousands from G4 toxicity.

Subjects

Subjects :
Therapeutics. Pharmacology
RM1-950

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15593258
Volume :
18
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Dose-Response
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.9c3b1ee33d43405b93a404a522196262
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1559325820951367