Episode 081: Pharmacology 101: Part 1 (REBOOT!)
As we prepare for another round oncology series in the weeks to come, we thought we would pause and go back to to the basics. We previously released this episode as Episode 020. This episode is a must-listen for anyone who talks to patients about chemotherapy!
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Picture this: it's day 1 of fellowship and your attending needs you to "get consent for treatment." Huh? How do you educate your patient? We share our tips!
In this episode, we discuss the fundamentals and some of our favorite resources.
*The resources we share are our OWN opinions. Naming of resources are not endorsements. We are not sponsored by any of these entities.
Pharmacology 101:
How do you know what regimen to use for a disease?
NCCN.org: National Comprehensive Cancer Network
Free resource, but need to make an account!
Provides stepwise approach to workup, choosing a regimen, and surveillance information, treatment for refractory disease
Organized by disease type with long lists of treatment options
Provides a breakdown of regimen, but also provides the primary literature that lead to the regimen’s approval for use!
We cannot highlight how important it is to remember to check out the primary literature!
Patient education: Use these to drive discussion; you still want to walk your patients through these
Oncolink.org: Ronak’s favorite resource
Chemocare.com: Vivek and Dan’s favorite resource
Basic Terminology:
Cycle: The number of days between one round of treatment until the start of the next; abbreviated with “C”
Days: Counts the actual days within a cycle; abbreviated with “D”
Example: C1D1: Cycle 1 of a regimen, day 1 of this cycle
Dosing:
Always have updated height and weight for patients
Many drugs are dosed based on body surface area (BSA)
Other drugs use area under the curve (AUC)
Always get a CMP and CBC prior to giving treatment
General categories of cancer therapies:
Cytotoxic: Kills cells in the body
Analogous to antibiotics killing bacteria
Relatively non-specific in terms of what cells they target; but they’re often specific for parts of the cell replication cycle
Immune therapy: Harness the immune system to attack cancer
More specific than cytotoxic agents
Targeted therapy: Drugs made specifically for known mutations
A cancer with a distinct mutation in a protein is then a target for this drug
In general:
“Mab”- antibody targeted for phenotypic expression
“ib”- small molecule for driver mutation
Targeted cytotoxic chemotherapy: a monoclonal antibody specific for a mutation linked to very potent chemotherapy
The crew behind the magic:
Show outline: Vivek Patel, Ronak Mistry
Production and hosts: Ronak Mistry, Vivek Patel, Dan Hausrath
Editing: Vivek Patel
Shownotes: Ronak Mistry
Social media management: Ronak Mistry