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Use in pregnancy may harm the fetus. [2] Daunorubicin is in the anthracycline family of medication. [3] It works in part by blocking the function of topoisomerase II. [2] Daunorubicin was approved for medical use in the United States in 1979. [2] It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines. [4]
Doxorubicin was isolated from a mutated variant of S. peucetius (var. caesius). It differs from daunorubicin only by the addition of a hydroxyl group at the carbon 14 position. This modification greatly changes the activity of the drug making it highly effective against a wide range of solid tumours, leukaemia and lymphomas.
Currently, there are four main anthracyclines in medical use: Doxorubicin; Daunorubicin (doxorubicin precursor) Epirubicin (a doxorubicin stereoisomer) Idarubicin (a daunorubicin derivative) [17] Idarubicin is able to pass through cell membranes easier than daunorubicin and doxorubicin because it possesses less polar subunits, making it more ...
Doxorubicin, sold under the brand name Adriamycin among others, is a chemotherapy medication used to treat cancer. [10] This includes breast cancer, bladder cancer, Kaposi's sarcoma, lymphoma, and acute lymphocytic leukemia. [10] It is often used together with other chemotherapy agents. [10] Doxorubicin is given by injection into a vein. [10]
A chemotherapy regimen is a regimen for chemotherapy, defining the drugs to be used, their dosage, the frequency and duration of treatments, and other considerations. In modern oncology, many regimens combine several chemotherapy drugs in combination chemotherapy. The majority of drugs used in cancer chemotherapy are cytostatic, many via ...
"7+3" in the context of chemotherapy is an acronym for a chemotherapy regimen that is most often used today (as of 2014) as first-line induction therapy (to induce remission) in acute myelogenous leukemia, [1] [2] excluding the acute promyelocytic leukemia form, which is better treated with ATRA and/or arsenic trioxide and requires less chemotherapy (if requires it at all, which is not always ...
Idarubicin / ˌ aɪ d ə ˈ r uː b ɪ s ɪ n / or 4-demethoxydaunorubicin is an anthracycline antileukemic drug.It inserts [1] itself into DNA and prevents DNA unwinding by interfering with the enzyme topoisomerase II.
As of 2007, ABVD is widely used as the initial chemotherapy treatment for newly diagnosed Hodgkin lymphoma. [citation needed] It has been the most effective and least toxic chemotherapy regimen available for treating early-stage Hodgkin Lymphoma. [1]