Medical intervention
ADE is a chemotherapy regimen most often used as an induction or consolidation regimen in acute myelogenous leukemia, especially in poor-risk patients or those refractory to the standard first-line induction with standard "7+3" regimen or who are relapsed after the standard chemotherapy.
ADE regimen consists of three drugs:
- Ara-C (cytarabine) - an antimetabolite;
- Daunorubicin - an anthracycline antibiotic that is able to intercalate DNA and thus disrupt the cell division cycle, preventing mitosis;
- Etoposide - a topoisomerase inhibitor.[1]
Dosing regimen
Drug |
Dose |
Mode |
Days
|
Ara-C (cytarabine) |
200 mg/m2 |
IV push every 12 hours in 2 divided doses (100 mg/m2 each) |
Days 1-10
|
Daunorubicin |
50 mg/m2 |
IV slow push |
Days 1, 3 and 5
|
Etoposide |
100 mg/m2 |
IV infusion over 1 hour |
Days 1-5
|
References