GemOx
GemOx or GEMOX is an acronym for one of the chemotherapy regimens used in the treatment of relapsed or primary refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and Hodgkin's lymphoma.
When combined with Rituximab it is called R-GemOx, R-GEMOX or GemOx-R, GEMOX-R.
The [R]-GemOx regimen consists of:
- (R)ituximab - anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody that has the ability to kill both normal and malignant B cells;
- (Gem)citabine - an antimetabolite;
- (Ox)aliplatin - a platinum-based alkylating antineoplastic agent.[1][2]
Dosing regimen
Drug | Dose | Mode | Days |
---|---|---|---|
(R)ituximab | 375 mg/m2 | IV infusion | Day 1 |
(Gem)citabine | 1000 mg/m2 | IV infusion in 500 ml normal saline with the speed of 10 mg/m2/min | Day 2 |
(Ox)aliplatin | 100 mg/m2 | IV infusion over 2hrs | Day 2 |
gollark: Also, why say "tonne" or "metric tone" when you could say... *megagram*?
gollark: Tonnes and tons are different, I think.
gollark: 666 kiloinch
gollark: It does big*ints*, decimals are available in a library. Probably several, since the "there's one way to do it" thing is a lie.
gollark: carrot 12 miles potato
References
- GEMOX-R regimen is a highly effective salvage regimen in patients with refractory / relapsing diffuse large-cell lymphoma: a phase II study
- Rituximab, gemcitabine and oxaliplatin: an effective salvage regimen for patients with relapsed or refractory B-cell lymphoma not candidates for high-dose therapy
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.