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Profound variation in dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase activity in human blood cells: major implications for the detection of partly deficient patients
Authors
A B P Van Kuilenburg
A H Van Gennip
+53 more
ABP Van Kuilenburg
ABP Van Kuilenburg
ABP Van Kuilenburg
ABP Van Kuilenburg
ABP Van Kuilenburg
ABP Van Kuilenburg
AH Van Gennip
AH Van Gennip
AH Van Gennip
AP Lyss
BE Harris
BE Harris
CH Takamoto
CL Mackall
D De Korte
DH Ho
E Haus
E P J Mul
F Stéphan
FNM Naguib
G Milano
G Milano
GC Daher
GD Heggie
H van Lenthe
J Born
J McMurrough
JE Maldonado
JL Grem
LE Strender
M Chazal
M De Boer
M J Blom
M Tuchman
MC Etienne
P Beuzeboc
P Fernandez-Salguero
P Houyau
P Vreken
P Vreken
P Vreken
PK Smith
R Meinsma
RA Fleming
RA Fleming
RB Diasio
RB Diasio
RW Pero
SD Baker
T Spector
W Kaffenberger
X Wei
Z Lu
Publication date
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Doi
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on
PubMed
Abstract
Dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD) is responsible for the breakdown of the widely used antineoplastic agent 5-fluorouracil (5FU), thereby limiting the efficacy of the therapy. To identify patients suffering from a complete or partial DPD deficiency, the activity of DPD is usually determined in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBM cells). In this study, we demonstrated that the highest activity of DPD was found in monocytes followed by that of lymphocytes, granulocytes and platelets, whereas no significant activity of DPD could be detected in erythrocytes. The activity of DPD in PBM cells proved to be intermediate compared with the DPD activity observed in monocytes and lymphocytes. The mean percentage of monocytes in the PBM cells obtained from cancer patients proved to be significantly higher than that observed in PBM cells obtained from healthy volunteers. Moreover, a profound positive correlation was observed between the DPD activity of PBM cells and the percentage of monocytes, thus introducing a large inter- and intrapatient variability in the activity of DPD and hindering the detection of patients with a partial DPD deficiency. © 1999 Cancer Research Campaig
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Last time updated on 05/06/2019