Sutent

Sutent

Generic Name

Sutent

Mechanism

  • Potent, orally available inhibitor of multiple receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs).
  • Targets include:
  • Vascular endothelial growth factor receptors (VEGFR‑1, 2, 3) – blocks angiogenesis.
  • Platelet‑derived growth factor receptors (PDGFR‑α, β) – inhibits pericyte recruitment and vessel maturation.
  • C‑Kit, Flt‑3, and RET – important in GIST and other neoplasms.
  • Competitive, ATP‑mimetic binding to the kinase domain → prevents phosphorylation of downstream signaling (MAPK/ERK, PI3K/AKT).
  • Results in cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, and reduced tumor vasculature.

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Pharmacokinetics

ParameterTypical Value
AbsorptionRapid; peak plasma concentrations at ~5–12 h after dosing, high oral bioavailability.
DistributionExtensive; large volume of distribution; strong tissue binding (esp. liver, kidneys, skin).
MetabolismPrimarily hepatic via CYP3A4 and CYP2C19; N‑demethylation → active metabolites (mostly inactive).
EliminationMainly biliary excretion; half‑life ≈ 40 h (dose‑dependent).
Drug interactionsHighly susceptible to CYP3A4 inhibitors/inducers; concomitant use with high‑dose *steroids* or *dexamethasone* potentiates toxicity; avoid strong CYP3A4 substitutes (ketoconazole, ritonavir).
Special populations

Renal impairment: dose adjustment not required.
Hepatic impairment: reduce starting dose.
Pregnancy: Category D; avoid. |

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Indications

  • Advanced/metastatic RCC (clear cell) – first‑line and second‑line.
  • Resistant or progressive GIST – after failure of imatinib.
  • Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor (PanNET) – progressive, symptomatic.
  • Adjuvant RCC (in selected patients with high risk of recurrence).
  • Breast cancer – investigational (post‑marketing trial).

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Contraindications

Contraindication / WarningKey Points
Severe uncontrolled hypertensionMust be controlled before initiation.
Active bleeding / coagulopathyHigh risk of hemorrhagic complications.
Cardiovascular diseaseScreening for CHF; monitor LVEF.
Recent myocardial infarction (≤6 mo)Avoid.
Pregnancy/BreastfeedingCrippling teratogenicity; contraindicated.
Known hypersensitivity to sunitinibAvoid.
Severe hepatic impairment (Child–Pugh B/C)Dose 50 mg → 37.5 mg; avoid in C.
Concurrent potent CYP3A4 inhibitorsContraindicated; adjust dose.

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Dosing

  • Standard regimen: 50 mg orally once daily, 4 weeks on / 2 weeks off (28‑day cycle).
  • Alternate schedule: 37.5 mg daily, 4 weeks on / 1 week off (for intolerance).
  • Administration: Take with or without food; whole capsule; avoid crushing.
  • Adjustments:
  • Hepatic impairment – reduce dose to 37.5 mg or 25 mg depending on B1/B2.
  • Renal impairment – same dose as normal.
  • Rescue therapy: Hold dose with ≥grade 3 toxicity; resume at 80 % dose after recovery to grade ≤2.

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Adverse Effects

CategoryExamples
Erythro‑deliveryHand‑foot skin reaction, mucositis, fatigue, rash.
HematologicAnemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia (rare).
CardiovascularHypertension, QT prolongation, congestive heart failure.
Gastro‑intestinalNausea, diarrhea, pneumonia.
HepaticElevated AST/ALT, bilirubin (transient).
DermatologicAlopecia, hyperpigmentation, photosensitivity.
OtherHypothyroidism (subclinical), interstitial lung disease (rare).

Serious:
Hypertensive crisis, FFP.
Cardiac dysfunction (≤10 % LVEF drop).
Severe mucositis/hand‑foot syndrome requiring dose reduction.
Interstitial lung disease – sudden onset dyspnea or cough.

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Monitoring

ParameterFrequencyRationale
Blood pressureBaseline, weekly for first month, then every 4 weeksTKI‑induced hypertension.
CBC (with diff.)Baseline, every 2–4 weeksDetect cytopenias.
BMP/Serum electrolytesBaseline, every 4 weeksMonitor renal function, sodium.
Liver function testsBaseline, every 4 weeksSpot early hepatotoxicity.
Echocardiogram / LVEFBaseline, every 3 monthsAlterations in cardiac output.
Thyroid panelBaseline, every 3 monthsSubclinical hypothyroidism risk.
Skin examBaseline, every cycleIdentify hand‑foot syndrome.
Patient diaryDailyRecord dose adherence, adverse events.

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Clinical Pearls

  • Liver‐dependent metabolismAvoid ketoconazole, ritonavir and induce (e.g., rifampin) categories; if unavoidable, dose‑reduce *sunitinib* to 25 mg daily.
  • First‑cycle hypertension is predictive of efficacy; manage aggressively with ACE/ARB or calcium‑channel blockers early.
  • Hand‑foot syndrome: Early moisturizers and dose modifications prevent progression; apply lidocaine‐soaked gauze for burning.
  • QT prolongation requires baseline ECG and re‑check 2 weeks after dose escalation; avoid combining with strong QT‑prolonging drugs.
  • Pharmacokinetic data indicate >95 % protein binding; plasma protein measurements are typically not justified.
  • Breastfeeding: Drug is excreted into milk; contraindicated.
  • Drug–drug interactions: Co‑administration with p‑methoxyacrylpyridine warfarin may increase bleeding; monitor INR.
  • Immunologic adverse events (e.g., interstitial lung disease) are under‑recognized; any new respiratory symptoms within weeks of therapy warrant prompt evaluation.

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Reference: Current prescribing information, NCCN guidelines (Version 2026), and peer‑reviewed pharmacology texts.

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