{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
{{facet.count}}
Search results for "treosulfan" in WIKIPEDIA (exact match)
Showing 1 - 1 of 1 results
Status:
US Approved Rx
(2025)
Source:
NDA214759
(2025)
Source URL:
First approved in 2025
Source:
NDA214759
Source URL:
Class (Stereo):
CHEMICAL (ABSOLUTE)
Treosulfan (l-threitol-1,4-bis-methanesulfonate; dihydroxybusulfan) is a prodrug of a bifunctional alkylating cytotoxic agent that is approved for the treatment of ovarian carcinomas in a number of European countries. The antitumor activity of treosulfan has been shown in a variety of solid tumors. It is used for the treatment of all types of ovarian cancer, either supplementary to surgery or palliatively. Treosulfan is a prodrug that is converted nonenzymatically first to a mono-epoxide – (2S,3S)- 1,2-epoxy-3,4-butanediol-4-methanesulfonate – and then to a diepoxide – l-diepoxybutane, which is also a metabolite of butadiene – under physiological conditions. Such conversions are assumed to account for the alkylating and therapeutic activities of treosulfan.