Mechlorethamine Health Article

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Definition

Mechlorethamine is a chemotherapy medicine used to treat cancer by destroying cancerous cells. Mechlorethamine is marketed as the brand name Mustargen. It is also commonly known as nitrogen mustard.

Purpose

Mechlorethamine is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to treat Hodgkin's disease and non-Hodgkins' lymphomas. It is also approved for certain types of leukemia, malignant lymphomas, and lung cancer. Mechlorethamine has been used to relieve symptoms caused by a build up of cancerous fluid in the lungs, abdomen, and around the heart.

Description

Mechlorethamine is one of the first chemotherapy drugs discovered to have an effect on cancer cells. Clinical trials with this agent began in the 1940s. Mechlorethamine is a member of the group of chemotherapy drugs known as alkylating agents. Alkylating agents interfere with the genetic material (DNA) inside the cancer cells, more specifically through cross-linking DNA strands, and prevent them from further dividing and growing more cancer cells. Mechlorethamine is commonly combined with other chemotherapy agents to treat cancer.

Recommended dosage

A mechlorethamine dose can be determined using a mathematical calculation that measures a person's body surface area (BSA). This number is dependent upon a patient's height and weight. The larger the person, the greater the body surface area. BSA is measured in the units known as square meter (m2). The body surface area is calculated and then multiplied by the drug dosage in milligrams per square meter (mg/m2). This calculates the actual dose a patient is to receive.

Mechlorethamine is a yellowish liquid that is injected directly into a vein over a period of one to five minutes. It can also be applied onto the skin as an ointment for certain conditions.

Mechlorethamine is combined with other chemotherapeutic drugs vincristine (oncovin), procarbazine, and prednisone for treatment of Hodgkin's disease. The dose of mechlorethamine used in this regimen is 6 mg per square meter on day 1 and day 8 of a treatment cycle. This regimen is referred to as MOPP, and was one the initial regimens that caused a breakthrough in the treatment of Hodgkin's disease.

Mechlorethamine can also be infused into certain compartments in the body where cancerous fluid has accumulated. The dose for this treatment is based on a patient's weight in kilograms (1 kilogram is 2.2 pounds). Mechlorethamine is given at a dose of 0.2 to 0.4 mg per kilogram of body weight, infused directly into the area where the fluid is building up.

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Author Info: Nancy J. Beaulieu R.Ph., B.C.O.P., The Gale Group Inc., Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Cancer, 2002
 
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