Immunosuppressive drugs Flashcards

1
Q

If a patient complains of hirsutism and gingival hyperplasia, which drug was she on? What’s another calcineurin inhibitor you can prescribe her?

A

She was on Cyclosporine but you can switch her to Tacrolimus, and avoid excessive hair and gingival growth.

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2
Q

To what molecule does Tacrolimus bind?

A

FK Binding protein: necessary for the protease function of calcineurin.

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3
Q

Does Cyclosporine directly inhibit calcineurin?

A

No. It binds to cyclophillin, a molecule necessary for the function of calcineurin.

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4
Q

Calcineurin activates what transcription factor? What does this TF cause the transcription of?

A

NFAT causes IL-2 transcription.

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5
Q

What is the main toxicity of Tacrolimus?

A

Neurotoxicity. Confusion.

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6
Q

What are the 2 terms for excessive hair growth in women?

A

Hirsutism and hypertrichosis

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7
Q

What drug inhibits mTOR? To what molecule does it bind?

A

Sirolimus binds FK binding protein, preventing mTOR activation by Il-2.

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8
Q

What 2 drugs bind FK binding protein? What do each do?

A

Sirolimus - inhibits mTOR (T-cell proliferation, B-cell doesn’t differentiate to plasma cell)

Tacrolimus - inhibits calcineurin, causing decreased transcription of Il-2

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9
Q

Describe the potential synergism between cyclosporine and sirolimus.

A

Cyclosporine inhibits the transcription of Il-2 genes by blocking calcineurin activation of NFAT.

Sirolimus blocks Il-2 stimulation of mTOR by binding FK binding protein.

They are essentially two sequential steps in the pathway of T-cell differentiation and proliferation, so they act synergistically to one another. Less Il-2 produced as a result of cyclosporine means less mTOR to inhibit.

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10
Q

What is the main toxicity associated with Sirolimus?

A

Hepatotoxicity and hyperlipidemia

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11
Q

Which of the following drugs is a substrate for metabolism via CYP3A4?

Cyclosporine
Tacrolimus
Sirolimus
Mycophenolate mofetil

A

Cyclosporing
Tacrolimus
Sirolimus

NOT mycophenolate mofetil

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12
Q

Which of the following drugs are substrates for metabolism by the P-gp receptor?

Cyclosporine
Tacrolimus
Sirolimus
Mycophenolate mofetil

A

Cyclosporine and Sirolimus

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13
Q

What drug specifically targets T-cells with CD3 on them?

A

Thymoglobulin

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14
Q

If you get a transplant, what drug is pretty much guaranteed to be on our regimen, regardless of which organ is being replaced>

A

Cyclosporine - chart page 35 of sweat man’s notes

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15
Q

What class of immunosuppressants is the most dangerous when pregnant and breastfeeding?

A

Cell cycle inhibitors

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16
Q

What classes of drugs are most likely to be used during INDUCTION of immune suppression? (aka.. initial depletion of immunity)

A

T-cell depletion by Thymoglobulin

Biological agents like Basiliximab

17
Q

What classes of drugs are generally used for maintenance of immune suppression, post-transplantation?

A

Cell Cycle inhibitors like azathioprine or prednisone

Calcineurin inhibitors like cyclosporin and tacrolimus

18
Q

How does prednisone work?

A

Cell cycle inhibitor via inhibition of transcription.

Used for maintenance therapy post-transplant.

19
Q

DOes prednisone cause bone marrow depletion?

A

NO.

Don’t know why… he mentioned it in class.

20
Q

Define the “first” and “second” phases of T-cell activation according to sweatman.

A

T-Cell activation:

Phase 1: Antigen presentation via MHC and secondary stimulation via B7/CD28 interaction and the gene transcription of Il-2 as a result.

Phase 2: Proliferation and clonal expansion induced by intracellular production of Il-2

21
Q

Why do immunosuppressive drug therapies vary between individuals and even ethnicities?

A

Different metabolism abilities and reactions to drug combinations.

22
Q

T/F: There is a standard regimen used for INDUCTION of immunosuppressive therapy.

A

FALSE. Always an individualized regimen.

23
Q

How many drugs are simultaneously prescribed in maintenance therapies? What are their mechanisms, usually?

A

Triple-drug therapy:

Calcineurin inhibitor (cyclosporine/tacrolimus)
Anti-proliferative cell cycle inhibitor (Azothioprine)
Steriod (Corticosteroids)

24
Q

What drugs inhibit the first phase of T-cell activation? What class of drugs are these?

A

Cyclosporine, Tacrolimus: Calcineurin inhibitors

25
Q

The action of Sirolimus is before or after the production of Il-2?

A

AFTER! It prevents the interaction of FK binding protein and Il-2 that activates mTOR, and subsequently cell proliferation and clonal expansion (2nd phase of T-cell)

26
Q

Which of the cell cycle inhibiting drugs blocks the synthesis of guanine?

A

Mycophenolate mofetil - Inhibits the enzyme inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase. –> no more GMP, so no more DNA synthesis.

27
Q

Why does Mycophenolate mofetil only target B and T cell populations?

A

B and T cells (lymphocytes) have no guanine salvage pathway. Block guanine, block DNA synthesis.

28
Q

Which drugs that we talked about are also anti-neoplastic agents?

A

Azathioprine
Methotrexate
Cyclophosphamide
Mycophenolate mofetil

ALL THE CELL CYCLE INHIBITORS (they target host cells, so it makes sense that they would be involved in cancer treatment)

29
Q

Which cell cycle inhibitor undergoes extensive metabolic conversion to a # of products?

A

Azathioprine

30
Q

MOA of Azathioprine?

A

Produces a metabolite (6 thioguanine triphosphate) that blocks T-cell co-stimulation and promotes apoptosis in Il-2 stimulated T-cells.

31
Q

People on immunosuppressants are at the greatest risk of developing what form of cancer?

A

Melanoma - stay out of UV light!

32
Q

What drug has the greatest effect in suppressing humoral immunity? (B-cells)

A

Cyclophosphamide

33
Q

MOA of Cyclophosphamide?

A

Alkylating agent that causes x-links between DNA strands or within the same DNA strand.

34
Q

Which drug causes the accumulations of adenosine? how does it do this?

A

Methotrexate.

  • It’s usually a DHFR inhibitor, and the pathways for de novo purine synthesis and Folate synthesis overlap.
  • Buildup of AICAR causes buildup of adenosine, which has anti-inflammatory properties
35
Q

Explain the significance of Adenosine Receptor Occupancy on monocytes and macrophages.

A

A high adenosine receptor occupancy on MACs and monocytes decreases the expression of inflammatory cytokines Il-12 and TNF-a, while increasing expression of anti-inflammatory Il-10 and VEGF.

GREAT FIGURE ON PAGE 30 OF HANDOUT

36
Q

What phase of the cell cycle does methotrexate cause cells to freeze in?

A

S phase - most purine synthesis going on due to DNA replication

37
Q

Name the primary toxicities of Methotrexate.

A

Hematologic toxicity

Teratogenic

Acute diarrhea