Pharmacological Class

  • Xanthine oxidase inhibitor
  • Non-purine selective inhibitor
  • Antihyperuricemic agent

Mechanism of Action

  • Inhibits xanthine oxidase, the enzyme responsible for converting hypoxanthine → xanthine → uric acid.
  • Result: ↓ serum uric acid levels.
  • Unlike allopurinol, non-purine structure → less cross-reactivity in patients with allopurinol hypersensitivity.

Clinical Uses in Oncology

Dosing (Adults)

Indication Dose Notes
TLS prophylaxis 40–120 mg orally once daily Start 1–2 days before chemotherapy; dose adjusted by uric acid response and renal function.
Chronic gout 40–80 mg orally once daily Titrate as needed to maintain uric acid <6 mg/dL.

Renal impairment:

  • Mild-moderate: no adjustment required.
  • Severe (CrCl <30 mL/min): max 80 mg/day.

Hepatic impairment:

  • Mild-moderate: caution.
  • Severe: not recommended.

Pharmacokinetics

  • Absorption: Oral, peak ~1 hour.
  • Metabolism: Hepatic via UGT1A1, CYP1A2, CYP2C8.
  • Half-life: 5–8 hours.
  • Excretion: ~50% hepatic (urine and feces).

Adverse Effects

  • Common: Liver enzyme elevation (AST, ALT), nausea, rash, headache.
  • Serious:
    • Cardiovascular events (MI, stroke) – especially in patients with pre-existing CV disease.
    • Severe hypersensitivity (rare).
  • Monitoring: LFTs at baseline and periodically; monitor uric acid, renal function, electrolytes in TLS patients.

Drug Interactions

  • Azathioprine / mercaptopurine: ↑ toxicity (both metabolized by xanthine oxidase); avoid co-administration.
  • Theophylline: ↑ levels via CYP1A2 inhibition.
  • Warfarin: usually no significant interaction, monitor INR.
  • CYP2C8/1A2 substrates: monitor for potential interactions.

Oncology Pearls

 

  • Febuxostat is especially useful in TLS prophylaxis when allopurinol is contraindicated (e.g., HLA-B*5801 positive patients at risk of severe hypersensitivity).
  • Unlike allopurinol, febuxostat does not require dose adjustment for mild renal impairment, which is advantageous in oncology patients with fluctuating renal function.
  • Monitor uric acid and renal function closely in TLS—goal is to prevent acute kidney injury.
  • CV risk should be assessed before use, particularly in elderly oncology patients with cardiovascular comorbidities.
Synonyms
Uloric
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