Vincristine chemical structure
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Vincristine

Vincristine (OncovinĀ®) is an alkaloid from the Madagascar periwinkle (Catharanthus roseus, formerly Vinca rosea and hence its name). It is used in chemotherapy. more...

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Mode of action

Tubulin is a structural protein which polymerises to form microtubules. The cell cytoskeleton and mitotic spindle, amongst other things, are made of microtubules. Vincristine binds to tubulin dimers causing disassembly of microtubule structures. Disruption of the microtubules arrests mitosis in metaphase. The vinca alkaloids therefore affect all rapidly dividing cell types, including cancer cells but also as intestinal epithelium and bone marrow.

Side effects

The main side-effects of vincristine are peripheral neuropathy and constipation. The latter may require laxatives, while the former can be a reason to reduce the dose of vincristine.

Accidental injection of vinca alkaloids into the spinal canal (intrathecal administration) is highly dangerous, with a mortality rate approaching 100%. The medical literature documents cases of ascending paralysis due to massive encephalopathy and spinal nerve demyelination, accompanied by intractable pain, almost uniformly leading to death; a handful of survivors were left with devastating neurological damage with no hope of recovery.

Uses

Vincristine, injected intravenously only, is used in various types of chemotherapy regimens. Its main uses are in non Hodgkin's lymphoma as part of the chemotherapy regimen CHOP, Hodgkin's lymphoma as part of the Stanford V chemotherapy regimen, and in acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

History

Having been used as a folk remedy for centuries, studies in the 1950s revealed that C. roseus contained 70 alkaloids, many of which biologically active. Vincristine gained FDA approval in July 1963 as Oncovin. The drug was initially marketed by Eli Lilly.

Suppliers

Three generic drug makers supply vincristine in the United States - APP, Mayne, and Sicor.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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Chemotherapy medication mixup may be fatal
From AORN Journal, 11/1/05

An alert issued by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) reports that patients undergoing chemotherapy to fight leukemia and lymphoma are sometimes accidentally being injected with a powerful anti-cancer medication in an incorrect way that results in death or permanent paralysis, according to a July 14, 2005, news release from JCAHO. The medication vincristine has been used widely and successfully to treat cancer for many years, but sometimes the medication is mistakenly administered in the sac around the spinal cord (ie, intrathecal) instead of intravenously.

Intrathecal administration of vincristine can be the result of a single error or a series of mistakes in a medication system, and these errors have continued to occur despite repeated warnings and extensive labeling requirements and standards. The Joint Commission alert recommends that hearth care organizations

* dilute the medication in such volume that it prevents intrathecal administration;

* clearly label all vincristine syringes with the warning that vincristine is fatal if given intrathecally and is for IV use only;

* ensure that IV and intrathecal medications are dispensed or administered at different times and in different locations; and

* have at feast two caregivers conduct a time out before the patient receives vincristine to independently confirm the correct patient, medication, dose, and route for administering the medication.

Joint Commission Issues Alert: Mixups in Administering Chemotherapy Drug Lead to Deaths (news release, Oakbrook Terrace, III: Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, July 14, 2005).

COPYRIGHT 2005 Association of Operating Room Nurses, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group

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