Class

Mechanism of Action

  • Leukemic lymphoblasts lack or have very low activity of asparagine synthetase, making them dependent on extracellular asparagine.
  • Calaspargase pegol catalyzes the hydrolysis of asparagine → aspartic acid + ammonia.
  • Result:
    • Depletion of circulating asparagine → inhibition of protein synthesis → apoptosis of leukemic cells.
    • Normal cells can synthesize asparagine, so less affected.

Indication

Pharmacology

  • Pegylated form of E. coli–derived asparaginase.
  • Longer half-life than pegaspargase (t½ ~16 days vs ~5–6 days).
  • Allows every-3-week dosing, improving compliance compared with pegaspargase (q2 weeks).

Dosing (FDA-approved)

  • 2,500 units/m² IV over 1 hour, every 21 days.
  • No intramuscular route (IV only).
  • Usually capped at maximum dose: 3,750 units.

Toxicities & Monitoring

Similar to other asparaginases:

  1. Hypersensitivity / Anaphylaxis
    • Less common with PEGylation, but still possible.
    • Monitor during infusion; premedication not routine unless prior mild reaction.
  2. Pancreatitis (can be life-threatening)
    • Monitor for abdominal pain, elevated amylase/lipase.
    • Discontinue permanently if grade ≥3 pancreatitis or hemorrhagic/necrotizing.
  3. Hepatotoxicity
    • Elevated bilirubin, transaminases, hypoalbuminemia, hepatic failure.
    • Monitor LFTs and coagulation parameters.
  4. Thrombosis and Bleeding
    • Alters protein C, S, antithrombin III → ↑ risk of VTE/bleeding.
    • Monitor coagulation studies; use anticoagulation only if clinically indicated.
  5. Hyperglycemia (due to reduced insulin synthesis).
    • Monitor glucose, especially if also receiving steroids.
  6. CNS toxicity (secondary to thrombosis or metabolic disturbances).

Clinical Advantages over Pegaspargase

  • Extended dosing interval (q3 weeks vs q2 weeks).
  • More predictable pharmacokinetics → sustained asparagine depletion.
  • May reduce hospital visits and improve adherence.

Monitoring Parameters

  • CBC, LFTs, amylase/lipase, fasting glucose.
  • Coagulation profile (PT, aPTT, fibrinogen, antithrombin III).
  • Observe for infusion reactions during and after infusion.

Key Clinical Pearl for Oncology Pharmacist:

Calaspargase is essentially a longer-acting, IV-only PEG-asparaginase. Its major value is reducing dosing frequency (q3 weeks) while maintaining effective asparagine depletion in ALL protocols, but vigilance for pancreatitis, thrombosis, and hepatotoxicity remains critical.