It causes delayed
bone marrow toxicity and therefore it is usually administered at 6-weekly intervals. Prolonged use may result in permanent bone-marrow damage. It may also cause
lung fibrosis and
renal damage. Anticancer treatments with
chemotherapeutic agents often impair brain cell function leading to
memory loss and cognitive dysfunction. In order to understand the basis of these impairments, mice were treated with mitomycin C, a chemotherapeutic agent, and cells of the
prefrontal cortex were examined. This treatment resulted in an increase of the
oxidative DNA damage 8-oxo-dG, a decrease in the enzyme
OGG1 that ordinarily repairs such damage and
epigenetic alterations. These alterations at the DNA level may explain, at least in part, the impairments of cognitive function after chemotherapy. Common side effects are ureteric obstruction (narrowing or blockage of the ureter that may lead to excess fluid in the kidney due to a backup of urine), flank pain (pain occurring on the side of the body), urinary tract infection, hematuria (blood in the urine), renal dysfunction (inability of the kidney to function in its designed capacity), fatigue, nausea, abdominal pain, dysuria (painful or difficult urination) and vomiting. == Pharmacology ==