Drug Overview
The COPDAC regimen is a combination chemotherapy protocol used in the treatment of Hodgkin lymphoma, particularly in pediatric and adolescent patients. It is not a single drug but a multi-agent chemotherapy regimen designed to maximize tumor destruction while reducing the long-term toxic effects associated with older treatment protocols. COPDAC was developed as part of international pediatric oncology collaborative research, most prominently within the EuroNet-PHL group, as a less toxic alternative to the older COPP regimen by replacing procarbazine with dacarbazine, reducing gonadotoxicity and secondary malignancy risk while maintaining strong antitumor activity.
COPDAC is an acronym representing its four component drugs:
- C – Cyclophosphamide: An alkylating agent that damages cancer cell DNA
- O – Vincristine (Oncovin): A vinca alkaloid that disrupts cancer cell division
- P – Prednisone: A corticosteroid that contributes anti-inflammatory and antitumor activity
- DAC – Dacarbazine: An alkylating agent replacing the older and more toxic procarbazine
- Generic Name: COPDAC; Cyclophosphamide, Vincristine, Prednisone, and Dacarbazine combination regimen
- US Brand Names: No single brand name. Individual components include Cytoxan (cyclophosphamide), Oncovin (vincristine), and DTIC-Dome (dacarbazine). Prednisone is available generically
- Drug Class: Combination Cytotoxic Chemotherapy Regimen comprising Alkylating Agents, a Vinca Alkaloid, and a Corticosteroid
- Route of Administration: Intravenous infusion for cyclophosphamide, vincristine, and dacarbazine; oral for prednisone
- FDA Approval Status: Individual component drugs are FDA-approved. The COPDAC regimen as a named combination protocol is used within established clinical practice guidelines but is not independently FDA-approved
What Is It and How Does It Work? (Mechanism of Action)

COPDAC achieves its antitumor effect through the combined and complementary mechanisms of its four agents, each attacking cancer cells through a distinct biological pathway. This multi-pronged approach reduces the likelihood of resistance developing to any single mechanism while increasing overall tumor cell death.
Cyclophosphamide is a nitrogen mustard alkylating agent converted by liver enzymes into active metabolites, primarily phosphoramide mustard. These metabolites form DNA interstrand crosslinks that physically prevent cancer cells from replicating their genetic material. Without the ability to copy its DNA, the cell undergoes apoptosis. Cyclophosphamide acts across all phases of the cell cycle, making it broadly effective against rapidly dividing tumor cells.
Vincristine targets the mitotic spindle, a tubulin-based cellular structure that separates chromosomes during cell division. By binding to tubulin and preventing spindle assembly, vincristine arrests cancer cells at the M phase of the cell cycle. Without a functional spindle, cell division cannot complete and the cell is directed toward programmed death.
Prednisone binds to intracellular glucocorticoid receptors, which translocate to the nucleus and regulate gene expression. In lymphoid cancer cells, this directly induces apoptosis. Prednisone also suppresses inflammatory cytokines that tumors use to promote their own growth environment.
Dacarbazine, the defining substitution distinguishing COPDAC from COPP, methylates DNA at multiple sites following metabolic activation, particularly at the O6 position of guanine. This disrupts normal base pairing and impairs DNA replication, leading to cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. Compared to procarbazine, dacarbazine carries a significantly lower risk of gonadotoxicity and secondary leukemia, making it the safer long-term choice for young patients.
FDA Approved Clinical Indications
The individual agents within COPDAC are FDA-approved. The regimen as a whole is an established standard-of-care protocol in pediatric oncology practice.
Oncological Uses:
- Hodgkin lymphoma in pediatric and adolescent patients, used as a consolidation or intensification chemotherapy block within risk-adapted treatment strategies
- Intermediate and high-risk classical Hodgkin lymphoma, used in combination with the OEPA regimen within EuroNet-PHL C1 and C2 trial protocols
- Relapsed or refractory Hodgkin lymphoma in selected salvage treatment frameworks
Non-Oncological Uses:
- There are no established non-oncological uses for the COPDAC regimen
Dosage and Administration Protocols
COPDAC is administered in defined cycles within a structured treatment protocol. Dosing is based on body surface area in pediatric patients and governed by the specific trial or institutional protocol being followed.
| Drug | Dose | Route | Days of Administration |
| Cyclophosphamide | 500 mg/m² per day | IV Infusion | Days 1 and 8 of each cycle |
| Vincristine (Oncovin) | 1.4 mg/m² per day (max 2 mg) | IV Bolus | Days 1 and 8 of each cycle |
| Prednisone | 40 mg/m² per day | Oral | Days 1 through 15 of each cycle |
| Dacarbazine | 250 mg/m² per day | IV Infusion | Days 1 through 3 of each cycle |
| Cycle Length | 28 days | — | Repeated per protocol schedule |
| Number of Cycles | 2 to 4 cycles depending on risk group | — | Per treating oncologist |
| Renal Impairment | Cyclophosphamide and dacarbazine doses require review | — | Physician discretion |
| Hepatic Impairment | Vincristine dose reduction may be required | — | Physician discretion |
Clinical Efficacy and Research Results
COPDAC has been studied most extensively within the EuroNet-PHL C1 and C2 collaborative trials, representing the largest prospective pediatric Hodgkin lymphoma studies conducted internationally. Data from the EuroNet-PHL C1 trial, updated through the 2020 to 2025 period, demonstrated that the OEPA-COPDAC framework achieved excellent event-free survival and overall survival rates across intermediate and high-risk pediatric patient groups. The substitution of dacarbazine for procarbazine was confirmed to meaningfully reduce gonadotoxicity compared to historical COPP-treated controls, with male fertility preservation rates significantly improved, without compromising antitumor efficacy.
The EuroNet-PHL C2 trial has continued refining the number of COPDAC cycles based on early treatment response assessed by interim PET-CT imaging. This response-adapted approach aims to reduce cumulative chemotherapy exposure in patients achieving early complete metabolic responses while intensifying treatment for those with persistent disease. Long-term follow-up data continues to support the favorable late-effects profile of COPDAC compared to older procarbazine-containing regimens, particularly regarding secondary malignancy rates and gonadal function preservation.
Safety Profile and Side Effects
The COPDAC regimen carries Black Box Warnings associated with its individual component agents. Cyclophosphamide carries warnings for hemorrhagic cystitis, myelosuppression, and secondary malignancy risk. Vincristine carries a critical Black Box Warning that intrathecal administration is fatal; it must always be administered intravenously only. Dacarbazine carries warnings related to hematopoietic depression and hepatotoxicity.
Common Side Effects (greater than 10%):
- Myelosuppression including neutropenia, anemia, and thrombocytopenia, increasing infection and bleeding risk
- Nausea and vomiting, particularly associated with dacarbazine and cyclophosphamide
- Alopecia, temporary hair loss affecting the majority of patients during treatment
- Fatigue and generalized weakness throughout the treatment course
- Peripheral neuropathy including numbness and tingling in the hands and feet from vincristine
- Constipation, a common vincristine-related effect on the autonomic nervous system
- Cushingoid features including weight gain and mood changes from prednisone
- Hemorrhagic cystitis caused by cyclophosphamide metabolites irritating the bladder wall
Serious Adverse Events:
- Severe febrile neutropenia requiring hospitalization and intravenous antibiotic therapy
- Severe hemorrhagic cystitis requiring urological intervention
- Vincristine-induced severe peripheral motor neuropathy causing functional impairment
- Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion associated with vincristine
- Hepatotoxicity associated with dacarbazine requiring liver function monitoring
- Opportunistic infections secondary to immunosuppression and corticosteroid use
Management Strategies:
Vigorous intravenous hydration must be maintained before and after cyclophosphamide infusion, and mesna may be co-administered to protect the bladder. Prophylactic antiemetics including ondansetron should be given before dacarbazine and cyclophosphamide infusions. G-CSF may support white blood cell recovery during severe neutropenia. Vincristine-related constipation should be managed proactively with stool softeners. Neuropathy must be assessed before each cycle and vincristine doses modified if significant neurological changes occur. Patients and families must be educated to seek emergency care immediately if fever develops during neutropenic periods.
Research Areas
COPDAC does not have a direct role in frontline stem cell transplantation, though high-dose chemotherapy followed by autologous stem cell rescue remains an established option for relapsed or refractory patients previously treated with COPDAC-containing regimens. Current research is focused on integrating response-adapted strategies with FDG-PET-CT imaging to individualize the number of COPDAC cycles based on real-time tumor response. Growing research interest also surrounds combining conventional COPDAC-based frameworks with anti-PD-1 immune checkpoint inhibitors such as nivolumab and pembrolizumab in high-risk or refractory pediatric Hodgkin lymphoma, with early trial data emerging that may redefine COPDAC’s role in future treatment algorithms.
Patient Management and Practical Recommendations
Pre-Treatment Tests to Be Performed:
- Complete blood count with differential to establish baseline hematological function
- Comprehensive metabolic panel including liver function tests and serum creatinine
- Urinalysis to assess baseline kidney and bladder health before cyclophosphamide initiation
- FDG-PET-CT or CT scan of chest, abdomen, and pelvis to document pre-treatment disease extent
- Fertility counseling and sperm banking for post-pubertal male patients prior to starting treatment
- Serum pregnancy test for all female patients of childbearing potential
- Hepatitis B and C serology given the immunosuppressive nature of the regimen
- Varicella zoster immune status assessment, as active infection during chemotherapy carries serious risk
Precautions During Treatment:
- Intravenous hydration must be initiated before and continued after every cyclophosphamide infusion
- Vincristine must never under any circumstance be administered via the intrathecal route
- Neutrophil counts must be confirmed above acceptable thresholds before each cycle is administered
- Peripheral neuropathy symptoms must be assessed at every clinical visit before vincristine dosing
- Blood glucose should be monitored during prednisone administration in patients with risk factors for steroid-induced hyperglycemia
Do’s and Don’ts:
- Attend every scheduled chemotherapy session, blood count check, and follow-up imaging appointment
- Drink generous amounts of fluid on cyclophosphamide administration days to protect the bladder
- Report any tingling, numbness, or weakness in the hands or feet before the next vincristine dose
- Follow the prescribed anti-nausea schedule beginning before infusion days, not after symptoms start
- Do not receive live vaccines during treatment or for the period specified by your oncology team afterward
- Do not take any new medications or herbal supplements without first consulting your oncologist
- Do not ignore fever during treatment; contact your medical team immediately if temperature exceeds 38 degrees Celsius
- Do not allow blood in the urine to go unreported; notify your oncology team the same day it is observed
Legal Disclaimer
The information presented in this guide is intended solely for educational and informational purposes and does not constitute medical advice, a clinical diagnosis, or a formal treatment recommendation. The individual drugs comprising the COPDAC regimen are FDA-approved agents; however, the COPDAC combination protocol is used within established clinical practice guidelines and trial frameworks and is not independently FDA-approved as a named regimen. All treatment decisions must be made exclusively by a qualified and licensed oncologist or healthcare professional in full consideration of the patient’s individual medical history, current clinical condition, applicable institutional protocols, and the regulatory framework of their country of residence. This content must not be used as a substitute for direct consultation with a qualified medical professional.