| Features: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Doxorubicin, (brand name Adriamycin) is a chemotherapy medication used to treat breast cancer, bladder cancer, Kaposi's sarcoma, lymphoma, and acute lymphocytic leukemia. Often used together with other chemotherapy agents. Given by injection into a vein. Doxorubicin is an anthracycline chemotherapy whose core anticancer activity is driven by DNA intercalation and topoisomerase II poisoning (DNA double-strand break stress), with additional contributions from redox cycling/iron-linked oxidative injury in some contexts. Its major clinical limitations are myelosuppression and cumulative dose–dependent cardiomyopathy, plus severe tissue injury if extravasated (leaks outside the vein). -Cumulative cardiomyopathy risk is real and dose-dependent; labels note higher risk at higher cumulative doses (often cited around >550 mg/m², with lower limits in higher-risk patients). -Mechanism split: tumor kill is primarily Topo II + DNA damage, while cardiotoxicity is strongly linked to TOP2β/mitochondrial pathways (redox/iron biology remains discussed, but not the only story). -Administration hazard: extravasation can cause severe local injury;
Time-Scale Flag (TSF): P / R / G
|
| Source: |
| Type: |
| Drug dosage vs efficacy, and actual dosage number of research papers. |
| - | in-vitro, | BC, | 4T1 | - | in-vitro, | BC, | MCF-7 |
Query results interpretion may depend on "conditions" listed in the research papers.
Such Conditions may include :
-low or high Dose
-format for product, such as nano of lipid formations
-different cell line effects
-synergies with other products
-if effect was for normal or cancerous cells
Filter Conditions: Pro/AntiFlg:% IllCat:% CanType:% Cells:% prod#:179 Target#:1114 State#:% Dir#:1
wNotes=0 sortOrder:rid,rpid