FM (chemotherapy)

FM in the context of chemotherapy means a chemotherapy regimen used as first-line therapy in indolent lymphomas. In combination with rituximab it is called R-FM or RFM or FM-R or FMR.

The [R]-FM regimen consists of:

  1. (R)ituximab - an anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody that is able to kill both normal B cells and malignant ones;
  2. (F)ludarabine - an antimetabolite;
  3. (M)itoxantrone - a synthetic anthracycline analogue (an anthraquinone) that is able to intercalate DNA and prevent mitosis.[1]

This regimen is also sometimes used in some autoimmune disorders that are inherently sensitive to rituximab, fludarabine and mitoxantrone in monotherapies (e.g. multiple sclerosis).

Dosing regimen

DrugDoseModeDays
(R)ituximab375 mg/m2IV infusionDay 1
(F)ludarabine25 mg/m2IV infusionDays 1-3
(M)itoxantrone10 mg/m2IV infusionDay 1
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gollark: OR WOULD YOU?
gollark: Well, you could use remote access to mess with the user more conveniently, no?
gollark: I'm thinking you could... probably work basic socket I/O into that, and have it just execute programs someone sends over UDP or whatever.
gollark: You have a 1KB trojan? Impressive.

References

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