Dac 5945
Dacarbazine
An antineoplastic agent. It has significant activity against melanomas. (from Martindale, The Extra Pharmacopoeia, 31st ed, p564)
Dacarbazine hydrochloride
An antineoplastic agent. It has significant activity against melanomas. (from Martindale, The Extra Pharmacopoeia, 31st ed, p564)
Dacarbazine regimen with epirubicin and fluorouracil
Chemotherapy protocol consisting of ... /Dacarbazine, Fluorouracil, Epirubicin/ used for treatment of neuroendocrine tumors.
Dacemazine hydrochloride
Dacetuzumab
Anti-CD40 antibody for treating hematological cancers.
Dacinostat
Histone deacetylase inhibitor.
Dacisteine
Daclatasvir
An HCV NS5A inhibitor.
Daclatasvir dihydrochloride
An HCV NS5A inhibitor.
Daclizumab
An anti-TAC (INTERLEUKIN-2 RECEPTOR ALPHA SUBUNIT) monoclonal antibody; immunoglobulin G1 disulfide with human-mouse monoclonal clone 1H4 light chain, dimer; it is used to treat MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS.
Dacomitinib
A pan-ERBB inhibitor.
NCI: An orally bioavailable, highly selective, second-generation small-molecule inhibitor of the pan-epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) family of tyrosine kinases (ErbB family) with potential antineoplastic activity. Dacomitinib specifically and irreversibly binds to and inhibits human EGFR subtypes, resulting in inhibition of proliferation and induction of apoptosis in EGFR-expressing tumor cells. EGFRs play major roles in tumor cell proliferation and tumor vascularization, and are often overexpressed or mutated in various tumor cell types. (NCI Thesaurus)
Dacomitinib
A pan-ERBB inhibitor.
NCI: An orally bioavailable, highly selective, second-generation small-molecule inhibitor of the pan-epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) family of tyrosine kinases (ErbB family) with potential antineoplastic activity. Dacomitinib specifically and irreversibly binds to and inhibits human EGFR subtypes, resulting in inhibition of proliferation and induction of apoptosis in EGFR-expressing tumor cells. EGFRs play major roles in tumor cell proliferation and tumor vascularization, and are often overexpressed or mutated in various tumor cell types. (NCI Thesaurus)