karboplatin
Karboplatin, also spelled carboplatin, is a platinum-based chemotherapy drug used to treat various cancers. It is a second-generation platinum compound and a close analog of cisplatin, designed to retain anticancer activity while reducing some of cisplatin’s toxicities. The active species forms after aquation and creates DNA crosslinks that interfere with replication and transcription, leading to cancer cell death.
Clinical use of karboplatin is broad but it is commonly employed in the treatment of ovarian cancer,
Adverse effects are dominated by myelosuppression, particularly thrombocytopenia and neutropenia. Nausea and vomiting can occur, though
Pharmacologically, karboplatin binds DNA to form crosslinks that block replication and transcription, promoting cancer cell death.