Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.17.3.2 (xanthine oxidase)
8,383 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Renal precipitation of uric acid associated with tumor lysis syndrome (TLS) is a major complication in the management of leukemia, lymphoma, and other drug-sensitive cancers. Management of hyperuricema has historically consisted of administration of allopurinol, hydration, alkalinization to maintain pH between 7.0 and 7.3, and in some cases diuresis. Allopurinol, a xanthine analogue, blocks xanthine oxidase and formation of uric acid. Urate oxidase converts uric acid to allantoin, which is 5-10 times more soluble than uric acid. Homo sapiens cannot express urate oxidase because of a nonsense mutation. Urate oxidase was initially purified from Aspergillus flavus fungus. Treatment with this nonrecombinant product had been effective in preventing renal precipitation of uric acid in cancer patients, but was associated with a relatively high frequency of allergic reactions. This enzyme was recently cloned from A. flavus and is now manufactured as a recombinant protein. Clinical trials have shown this drug to be more effective than allopurinol for prevention and treatment of hyperuricemia in leukemia and lymphoma patients. This drug has been approved in Europe as well as the US and several clinical trials are in progress to further determine its clinical utility in other patient subsets. The purpose of this meeting was to discuss usefulness of recombinant urate oxidase, also known as rasburicase, Fasturtec, and Elitek, for the management of TLS in certain cancer patients.
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PMID:Elitek-rasburicase: an effective means to prevent and treat hyperuricemia associated with tumor lysis syndrome, a Meeting Report, Dallas, Texas, January 2002. 1264 38

Tumor lysis syndrome (TLS) is a serious complication in patients with hematological malignancies. Massive lysis of tumor cells can lead to hyperuricemia, hyperkalemia, hyperphosphatemia and hypocalcaemia. These metabolic disturbances may result in renal failure, because of precipitation of uric acid crystals and calcium phosphate salts in the kidney. The standard prophylaxis or treatment of hyperuricemia consists of decreasing uric acid production with allopurinol and facilitating its excretion by urinary alkalinization and hyperhydration. By inhibiting the enzyme xanthine oxidase, allopurinol blocks the conversion of hypoxanthine and xanthine into uric acid. An alternative treatment is urate oxidase which oxidates uric acid into allantoin. Allantoin is 5-10 times more soluble than uric acid and is therefore excreted easily. In several clinical trials rasburicase, the recombinant form of urate oxidase, has shown to be very effective in preventing and treating hyperuricemia. Rasburicase, in contrast with the non-recombinant form of urate oxidase uricozyme, is associated with a low incidence of hypersensitivity reactions. In addition to the demonstrated clinical benefit, rasburicase also proved to be a cost-effective option in the management of hyperuricemia.
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PMID:Management of hyperuricemia with rasburicase review. 1557 Dec 72

The pharmacological profile of drugs for hyperuricemia is reviewed. These agents may reduce the amount of uric acid in blood by means of two different ways: (1) by reducing uric acid production through the inhibition of the enzyme xanthine oxidase (as allopurinol); (2) by increasing uric acid clearance through an inhibition of its renal tubular reabsorption (as probenecid), or through its metabolic conversion to a more soluble compound (as urate oxidase). Allopurinol is rapidly converted in the body to the active metabolite oxypurinol whose total body exposure may be 20-fold greater than that of the parent compound due to a much longer elimination half-life. Allopurinol undergoes several pharmacokinetic interactions with concomitant administered drugs, some of which may be potentially hazardous (especially with mercaptopurine and azathioprine). Probenecid is an uricosuric agent which undergoes extensive hepatic metabolism and whose elimination after high doses may become dose dependent. It may inhibit renal tubular secretion of several coadministered agents, including methotrexate and sulphonylureas. Rasburicase is a recombinant form of the enzyme urate oxidase which catalyzes the conversion of uric acid to the more soluble compound allantoin. Unlike allopurinol, it does not promote accumulation of hypoxanthine and xanthine in plasma, thus preventing the risk of xanthine nephropathy. Rasburicase showed no significant accumulation in children after administration of either 0.15 or 0.20 mg/kg/daily for 5 days. Rasburicase probably undergoes peptide hydrolysis and in in vitro studies was shown neither to inhibit or induce cytochrome P450 isoenzymes nor to interact with several drugs, so that no relevant interaction is expected during cotreatment in patients.
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PMID:Pharmacology of drugs for hyperuricemia. Mechanisms, kinetics and interactions. 1560 4

Gout is a common chronic arthritis that can lead to significant disability. Gout is one of the few rheumatological conditions that can be diagnosed with certainty, has a known cause and can be cured with appropriate therapy. Hypouricaemic agents reduce uric acid concentrations through inhibiting uric acid production (allopurinol) or enhancing uric acid excretion (probenecid, benzbromarone). Allopurinol is the most commonly used hypouricaemic agent but at recommended doses often fails to reduce adequately uric acid concentrations and prevent acute attacks of gout. The use of probenecid is limited by lack of efficacy in renal impairment. In the last few years, new agents in the management of hyperuricaemia and gout have become available. Febuxostat, a new xanthine oxidase inhibitor, is an effective hypouricaemic agent although further data are required for patients with renal impairment and other significant medical conditions. Rasburicase, a recombinant uricase (which catalyses the conversion of uric acid to the more readily excreted allantoin) is available for prevention of tumour lysis syndrome. However, its repeated use, as would be required in chronic gout, is limited by antigenicity. A less antigenic PEGylated uricase can rapidly reduce serum uric acid concentrations and promote resorption of tophi. However, further information with regard to the long-term risks and benefits of these agents is required. These agents may ultimately be used in the short term to rapidly deplete urate stores (induction therapy) followed by long-term therapy with an alternative hypouricaemic agent to prevent subsequent accumulation of uric acid (maintenance therapy).
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PMID:Emerging therapies in the long-term management of hyperuricaemia and gout. 1738 67

Tumor lysis syndrome (TLS) is a potentially life-threatening complication of cancer therapy characterized by two or more of the following laboratory abnormalities: hyperuricemia, hyperkalemia, hypocalcemia, and hyperphosphatemia, with resultant end-organ damage, eg, renal failure, seizures, or cardiac arrhythmias. High-risk patients include those with highly proliferative cancers and/or large tumor burdens, particularly in the setting of highly effective chemotherapy, among other risk factors. Before 2002, antihyperuricemic drug therapy was limited to allopurinol, a xanthine oxidase inhibitor. Rasburicase, a recombinant urate oxidase, was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for children in 2002 and adults in 2009, ushering in a new era in TLS therapy. We attempted to critically appraise the available evidence supporting the perceived benefits of rasburicase in the management of TLS. A Medline search yielded 98 relevant articles, including 26 retrospective and 22 prospective studies of rasburicase for the treatment of TLS, which were then evaluated to determine the best available evidence for the effectiveness of rasburicase in terms of disease-oriented, patient-oriented, and economic outcomes. Rasburicase is now a standard of care for patients at high risk of TLS despite continuing debate on the correlation between its profound and rapid lowering of plasma uric acid levels with hard patient outcomes, eg, need for renal replacement therapy and mortality. Rasburicase is dramatically effective in lowering plasma uric acid levels. The mortality and cost-effectiveness benefits of this expensive drug remain to be conclusively proven, and well designed, randomized controlled trials are needed to answer these fundamentally important questions.
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PMID:Rasburicase in the management of tumor lysis: an evidence-based review of its place in therapy. 2561 Mar 45