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Vinca alkaloids and taxanes

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Microtubule Dynamics - Tubulin Titans

  • Core Concept: Arresting mitosis (M-phase) by disrupting microtubule function.

Taxane effects on cell division and microtubule spindles

  • Vinca Alkaloids (Vincristine, Vinblastine)

    • MOA: Bind β-tubulin, preventing polymerization into microtubules.
    • Toxicity:
      • Vincristine: Neurotoxicity (peripheral neuropathy). 📌 "Crisps the Nerves."
      • Vinblastine: Myelosuppression. 📌 "Blasts the Marrow."
  • Taxanes (Paclitaxel, Docetaxel)

    • MOA: Hyperstabilize polymerized microtubules, preventing breakdown.
    • Toxicity: Myelosuppression, neuropathy.

Exam Favorite: Vincristine-induced neurotoxicity is a major dose-limiting side effect, manifesting as peripheral neuropathy (e.g., foot drop, paresthesias) and autonomic dysfunction (e.g., constipation).

Vinca Alkaloids - Arresting Assembly

  • Mechanism of Action: Natural alkaloids from the periwinkle plant. They bind to β-tubulin, preventing its polymerization into microtubules. This disrupts the mitotic spindle, arresting the cell cycle in M-phase.
  • Agents: Vincristine, Vinblastine, Vinorelbine.
    • 📌 Vinca alkaloids Arrest microtubule Assembly.
  • Clinical Use:
    • Vincristine: Part of combination chemo for Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL), Hodgkin & Non-Hodgkin lymphomas.
    • Vinblastine: Testicular cancer, Hodgkin lymphoma.
  • Adverse Effects (Dose-Limiting):
    • Vincristine: Severe neurotoxicity (peripheral neuropathy, paresthesias).
    • Vinblastine: Potent myelosuppression.

⭐ Vincristine's signature toxicity is dose-limiting peripheral neuropathy ("stocking-glove" distribution), often presenting with loss of deep tendon reflexes like the Achilles reflex. Unlike Vinblastine, it has minimal myelosuppression.

  • Resistance: Increased drug efflux via P-glycoprotein (MDR1 gene).

Taxanes - Frozen Scaffolding

  • Mechanism: Hyperstabilize polymerized microtubules in the M phase, preventing mitotic spindle breakdown (anaphase cannot occur). This leads to apoptosis.
    • Binds to β-tubulin at a site distinct from vinca alkaloids.
    • 📌 Mnemonic: Paying your Taxes helps stabilize the economy.
  • Agents: Paclitaxel, Docetaxel, Cabazitaxel.
  • Clinical Use: Solid tumors, including breast, ovarian, lung, and prostate cancer.
  • Adverse Effects:
    • Myelosuppression (neutropenia is dose-limiting).
    • Peripheral neuropathy (stocking-glove pattern).
    • Hypersensitivity reactions (especially with Paclitaxel).
    • Alopecia.

Exam Favorite: Paclitaxel can cause severe hypersensitivity reactions due to its solvent, Cremophor EL. Premedication with corticosteroids (e.g., dexamethasone) and H1/H2 blockers (e.g., diphenhydramine, ranitidine) is standard practice to prevent this.

Clinical Correlates - Toxicity & Resistance

  • Vinca Alkaloids:

    • Vincristine: Dose-limiting neurotoxicity (peripheral neuropathy, areflexia, paresthesias). Minimal myelosuppression. 📌 "Vincristine cripples nerves."
    • Vinblastine/Vinorelbine: Dose-limiting myelosuppression. Less neurotoxic. 📌 "Vinblastine blasts marrow."
  • Taxanes (Paclitaxel, Docetaxel):

    • Dose-limiting myelosuppression (neutropenia).
    • Peripheral neuropathy.
    • Hypersensitivity reactions (pre-medicate with steroids/antihistamines).
    • Docetaxel: notable for fluid retention.
  • Resistance Mechanism:

    • Increased expression of P-glycoprotein (MDR1 gene), an efflux pump that removes the drug from the cell.

Exam Favorite: The key toxicity distinction: Vincristine's dose-limiting toxicity is neurotoxicity, whereas for Vinblastine and all Taxanes, it is myelosuppression.

  • Vinca alkaloids and Taxanes are M-phase specific agents that target microtubules.
  • Vincas (Vincristine, Vinblastine) prevent the polymerization of microtubules, leading to metaphase arrest.
  • Taxanes (Paclitaxel, Docetaxel) prevent microtubule disassembly, effectively freezing the cell in mitosis.
  • The major, dose-limiting toxicity of Vincristine is peripheral neuropathy.
  • In contrast, Vinblastine is primarily known for causing myelosuppression.
  • Paclitaxel's main side effects include myelosuppression, neuropathy, and hypersensitivity reactions.

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