Impact of Upfront DPYD Genotyping on Fluoropyrimidine Adjuvant Therapy in Colorectal Cancer: A Real-World Data




Saarenheimo, Jatta; Willför, Hugo; Wahid, Nesna; Jekunen, Antti; Andersén, Heidi

PublisherElsevier BV

2025

Clinical Colorectal Cancer

Clinical Colorectal Cancer

Clin Colorectal Cancer

24

2

264

271

1533-0028

1938-0674

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.clcc.2025.02.001

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clcc.2025.02.001



Background

The application of fluoropyrimidine-based chemotherapy in colorectal cancer treatment is known to pose significant toxicity risks, which can be mitigated by tailoring treatment according to DPYD gene variants. This study evaluates the impact of DPYD genotype-guided dosing on treatment-related toxicities and patient outcomes.

Methods

A retrospective analysis was conducted on CRC patients treated with fluoropyrimidines in adjuvant setting at The Wellbeing Services County of Ostrobothnia. Patients were divided into two cohorts based on the implementation of routine DPYD genotyping: pregenotyping (2016-2018) (n = 80) and postgenotyping (2020-2022) (n = 69). The incidence of side effects, treatment discontinuation, hospitalization, and 90-day mortality were compared between groups.

Results

The study revealed a reduction in 90-day mortality rates among patients who underwent DPYD genotyping before treatment. Patients with pathogenic DPYD variants received ≥50% reduced doses initially, leading to no severe toxicities (grade ≥3). Class 3 variants showed similar side effect profiles and hospitalization rates as untested patients but had a lower rate of treatment discontinuation.

Conclusions

Upfront DPYD genotyping appears to improve patient safety in CRC patients treated with adjuvant fluoropyrimidines, leading to personalized dosing that reduces severe toxicities and early mortality. These findings underscore the importance of integrating pharmacogenetic testing in clinical oncology to optimize treatment regimens and enhance patient care.



This work was partly supported by the Finnish government research funding grants to JS and AJ, and by the Pohjanmaan Syöpäyhdistys funding grants to JS and HA. No other financial assistance was received.


Last updated on 2025-23-05 at 14:21