Mitomycin

Chemical formula: C₁₅H₁₈N₄O₅  Molecular mass: 334.327 g/mol  PubChem compound: 5746

Pharmacodynamic properties

The antibiotic mitomycin is a cytostatic medicinal product from the group of alkylating agents.

Mitomycin is an antibiotic isolated from Streptomyces caespitosus with anti-neoplastic effect. It is present in an inactive form. Activation to a trifunctional alkylating agent is rapid, either at physiological pH in the presence of NADPH in serum or intracellularly in virtually all cells of the body with the exception of the cerebrum, as the blood-brain barrier is not overcome by mitomycin. The 3 alkylating radicals all stem from a quinone, an aziridine and a urethane group. The mechanism of action is based predominantly on the alkylation of DNA (RNA to a lesser extent) with the corresponding inhibition of DNA synthesis. The degree of DNA damage correlates with the clinical effect and is lower in resistant cells than in sensitive ones. As with other alkylating agents, proliferating cells are damaged to a greater extent than those that are in the resting phase (GO) of the cell cycle. Additionally, free peroxide radicals are released, particularly in the case of higher doses, which result in DNA breaks. The release of peroxide radicals is associated with the organ-specific pattern of side-effects.

Pharmacokinetic properties

After the intravenous administration of 10-20 mg/m² of mitomycin, maximum plasma levels of 0.4-3.2 µg/ml have been measured. The biological half-life is short and is between 40 and 50 minutes. The serum level falls biexponentially, steeply at first within the first 45 minutes, and then more slowly.

After approximately 3 hours the serum levels are usually below the detection limit. The main location for metabolism and elimination is the liver. Accordingly, high concentrations of mitomycin have been found in the gall bladder. Renal excretion plays only a minor role with respect to the elimination.

During intravesical therapy mitomycin is only absorbed in insignificant doses. Nevertheless, a systemic effect cannot be excluded completely.

Preclinical safety data

In animals, mitomycin is toxic to all proliferating tissues, particularly the cells of the bone marrow and the mucous membrane of the gastrointestinal tract, resulting in the inhibition of spermiogenesis.

Mitomycin has mutagenic, carcinogenic and teratogenic effects which can be demonstrated in corresponding experimental systems.

Local tolerance

Mitomycin causes severe necrosis in the case of paravenous injection or leakage from the blood vessel into surrounding tissue.

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