Pharmacokinetics Zalcitabine has a very high oral absorption rate of over 80%. It is predominantly eliminated by the renal route, with a half-life of 2 hours.
Mechanism of action Zalcitabine is an
analog of
pyrimidine. It is a derivative of the naturally existing deoxy
cytidine, made by replacing the
hydroxyl group in position 3' with a
hydrogen. It is phosphorylated in
T cells and other HIV target cells into its active triphosphate form, ddCTP. This active metabolite works as a substrate for HIV
reverse transcriptase, and also by incorporation into the viral DNA, hence terminating the
chain elongation due to the missing hydroxyl group. Apart from inhibiting retroviral reverse transcriptase, ddC inhibits mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma, resulting in a dose-limiting toxicity. == History ==