| Features: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Capecitabine is an oral chemotherapy medication used primarily in the treatment of various cancers. Capecitabine is an antimetabolite chemotherapeutic agent. It's classified as a prodrug, meaning it is metabolized in the body to its active form, 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). Once ingested, capecitabine is absorbed and converted through a series of enzymatic reactions into 5-FU. 5-FU then interferes with DNA synthesis and RNA processing by inhibiting enzymes like thymidylate synthase. This disruption of nucleotide production hinders rapid cell division, making it effective against cancer cells that multiply quickly. One of the advantages of capecitabine is that it is taken by mouth in tablet form, as opposed to intravenous administration, which can be more convenient for patients Capecitabine — Capecitabine is an orally administered fluoropyrimidine carbamate prodrug that is converted through sequential enzymatic metabolism to 5-fluorouracil, with the final activation step mediated by thymidine phosphorylase, which is often relatively enriched in tumor tissue. It is formally classified as an antimetabolite cytotoxic chemotherapy and a 5-FU prodrug. Standard abbreviations include CAP and Cape; the Nestronics abbreviation appears to be “capec” but Nestronics aliases/tags are UNVERIFIED (access blocked via click-path). Clinically, capecitabine is a standard-of-care systemic agent rather than an experimental adjunct, with established regulatory use in colorectal, breast, gastric/GEJ, rectal chemoradiation, and pancreatic settings depending on regimen and jurisdiction. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Oral absorption is rapid, with median Tmax about 1.5 hours for capecitabine and about 2 hours for fluorouracil. Food lowers capecitabine and 5-FU exposure and delays Tmax, which is why labeling directs dosing within 30 minutes after a meal. Plasma protein binding is under 60%, terminal half-lives are short at about 0.75 hour for capecitabine and 5-FU, and urinary excretion is dominant. Renal impairment substantially raises exposure to metabolites, especially FBAL, making renal function clinically important for dosing and tolerability. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: This is a prodrug whose relevance is pathway- and metabolism-dependent rather than parent-drug concentration alone. Many in-vitro studies using high capecitabine concentrations, enzyme-poor systems, or direct comparison with 5-FU can be misleading, because clinical activity depends on host and tumor enzymatic conversion and the downstream intracellular fluoropyrimidine metabolites rather than sustained high circulating parent-drug levels. Clinical evidence status: High-level clinical evidence and full deployment. Capecitabine has long-standing phase III and regulatory support as an approved fluoropyrimidine backbone or substitute for infusional 5-FU in several solid tumors, and it is routinely used both as monotherapy and in combination regimens, including chemoradiation contexts. Current safety regulation has become more restrictive because of DPD deficiency risk, with recent FDA and Canadian labeling/guidance emphasizing pre-treatment DPYD evaluation and avoidance in complete DPD deficiency. Mechanistic profile
P: 0–30 min R: 30 min–3 hr G: >3 hr |
| Source: |
| Type: |
| Power to enhance an anti cancer effect |
| 2486- | metroC, | capec, | Sustained complete response of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma with metronomic capecitabine: a report of three cases |
| - | Case Report, | HCC, | NA |
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#:328 Target#:961 State#:% Dir#:4
wNotes=0 sortOrder:rid,rpid