Acute Porphyria Drug Database

Monograph

L01BB03 - Tioguanine
Propably not porphyrinogenic
PNP

Rationale
Non-CYP metabolism. Absence of reported interactions with CYP-metabolised drugs indicate lack of capacity for CYP-induction or CYP-inhibition. However, side effects such as nausea and vomiting may be potentially porphyrinogenic through reduction in caloric intake.
Chemical description
Tioguanine is an analogue of the naturally occurring purine, guanine.
Therapeutic characteristics
Tioguanine is an antineoplastic agent used in the induction of remissions in acute myeloid leukaemia. It has also been used in other malignancies including acute lymphoblastic leukaemia and chronic myeloid leukaemia. Tioguanine is given orally. Common adverse reactions of tioguanine that can be confused with an acute porphyric attack are nausea and vomiting. Side effects such as nausea and vomiting may be potentially porphyrinogenic through reduction in caloric intake.
Metabolism and pharmacokinetics
Tioguanine is inactivated primarily by methylation to aminomethylthiopurine; small amounts are deaminated to thioxanthine, and may go on to be oxidised by xanthine oxidase to thiouric acid, but inactivation is essentially independent of xanthine oxidase and is not affected by inhibition of the enzyme. Oxidative S-demethylation may involve CYPs. There ar two main catabolic ways, none of which is CYP-dependent: methylation and deamination followed by oxidation. No observations of interactions with CYP-metabolism of other drugs. Not listed as CYP-inducer or inhibitor.
Published experience
Used uneventfully in the treatment of acute myelogenous leucemia in an AIP woman (Wehmeier, 1987). Used uneventfully in the treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in VP woman (Samuels, 1984).

References

# Citation details PMID
*Scientific articles
1. Chemotherapy in porphyria.
Samuels B, Bezwoda WR, et al. S Afr Med J. 1984;65(23):924-6.
2. Polychemotherapy of acute myelogenous leukemia in a patient with acute intermittent porphyria.
Wehmeier A, Fischer JT, et al. Klin Wochenschr. 1987;65(7):338-40.
*Drug reference publications
3. McEvoy GK, editor. Thioguanine. The AHFS Drug Information 2008. Bethesda, MD: American Society of Health-System Pharmacists; 2009. Electronic version (02.07.10).
4. Sweetman SC, editor. Martindale: The complete drug reference. Tioguanine. Pharmaceutical Press 2009.
*Other sources
5. Swedish National Formulary. FASS. Lanvis. www.fass.se (product leaflet).

Similar drugs
Explore alternative drugs in similar therapeutic classes L01B / L01BB or go back.

Tradenames and packages
From some sources, we get a list of packages (United Kingdom, Ireland, Estonia). Other sources contain more or less "clean" versions of the trade name (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Lithuania, Norway). What you see here is the raw data we get from each country, so there will appear to be duplicates. The bold names are the searchable terms. The gray names that follow are all mapped to the bolded term.
Note: The cleaning is done automatically by a proprietary algorithm, and it may produce errors. We strive to improve it continuously.
Netherlands
Lanvis · Lanvis 40 mg tabletten · Thiosix · Thiosix 10 mg, tabletten · Thiosix 20 mg, tabletten
Belgium
Lanvis · Lanvis 40 mg comp.
United Kingdom
Lanvis · Lanvis 40mg tablets · Tioguanine · Tioguanine 10mg capsules · Tioguanine 40mg tablets · Tioguanine 50mg/5ml oral suspension
Norway
Lanvis · Tioguanine
Poland
Lanvis
 
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