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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (
dizziness
)
9,689
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Aminoglutethimide
(AG) was administered as palliative therapy in 112 patients with metastatic breast cancer. In 36 patients, the dose level was 1000 mg/day; 76 patients received a dose level of 500 mg/day. Patients with brain or liver metastasis were excluded, as were patients with tumors determined to be negative for estrogen receptors. Objective regression was observed in 35 (31%) patients, with the duration of response ranging from 4 to 36 + months (mean, 12 months; median, 10 months). Response was observed in 11 of 31 (35%) patients with soft tissue metastasis; 16/59 (27%) patients with osseous metastasis; and 8 of 22 (36%) having visceral metastasis. In 93 patients with positive estrogen receptor (ER), 33 responded (35%), whereas in 19 patients with unknown ER status, two responded (11%). Response to previous treatment with tamoxifen (TAM) had occurred in 31 patients; of these, response to AG was noted in 11 (35%). Of 24 patients failing to respond to prior treatment with tamoxifen, four (17%) responded to subsequent therapy with AG. Thirteen patients had previously received combination chemotherapy, and response to AG was noted in two (15%). The side effects observed in this study included skin rash in ten patients, fever in eight, somnolence in three, weakness and
dizziness
in one, headache in one, insomnia in one, dyspnea in one, and ataxia in one. Treatment had to be discontinued in eight patients, due to the severity of the side effects. As expected, patients receiving AG at the lower dose level of 500 mg/day experienced fewer and less severe side effects than those treated with the higher dose. The response rate in the 1000 mg/day group was 10/36 (28%) and in the 500 mg/day group, it was 25/76 (33%). The lower dosage was better tolerated without apparent compromise in therapeutic efficacy.
...
PMID:Aminoglutethimide in patients with metastatic breast cancer. 246 35
In an attempt to define the activity and toxicity of low-dose aminoglutethimide plus steroid replacement in advanced breast cancer, we treated 40 patients with aminoglutethimide 500 mg/day + hydrocortisone 50 mg/day. Previous treatment consisted of additive hormones in 29 patients, oophorectomy in 8, and chemotherapy in 32. Among the 37 patients evaluable for response and toxicity, 5 objective responses (16.2%) and 20 stable diseases (54%) were noted. Toxicity, absent in 23 patients (62.1%) and mild in 14, consisted mainly of Grade I (WHO) nausea, drowsiness, cutaneous rash, and
dizziness
. Responders and patients with stable disease experienced a similar survival (median not reached at 22 months).
Aminoglutethimide
at low doses appears to be beneficial in patients refractory to conventional therapies even if the objective response rate is low.
...
PMID:Low-dose aminoglutethimide plus steroid replacement in advanced breast cancer patients resistant to conventional therapies. 279 May 34
From July 1980 to June 1983, 61 postmenopausal women with progressive metastatic breast cancer were treated with aminoglutethimide, 250 mg 4 times daily, plus cortisone acetate, 25 mg twice daily. Of 51 evaluable patients, an objective remission was observed in 22 (43%) (partial remission in 19, complete in 3), stable disease in 14 (27%), and progressive disease in 15 (30%). The median duration of response was 60 weeks (range 12+; 94+). The response rate was higher when the dominant disease site was soft tissue (50%) or bone (56%) rather than viscera (29%). Side effects were common but usually slight and transient. Somnolence (69%),
dizziness
(41%), nausea (35%) and skin rash (27%) were the most frequent. Serum levels of gamma-GT, alkaline phosphatase and total cholesterol rose during aminoglutethimide treatment, whereas levels of uric acid and indirect bilirubin decreased.
Aminoglutethimide
plus cortisone acetate appears to be an active and relatively safe treatment in advanced breast cancer and may be recommended as second-line endocrine treatment.
...
PMID:Aminoglutethimide in advanced breast cancer. 286 33
Eighty-seven consecutive patients with metastatic breast cancer were treated with aminoglutethimide plus hydrocortisone. All patients were postmenopausal and had progressive disease following prior chemotherapy and endocrine therapy. Eighty-five women were evaluable for drug response. One patient showed complete remission and 14 patients partial response, for an overall response rate of 17%. The median duration of response was 11+ months. The response rate was highest in the presence of soft tissue involvement (36%). The most common side effects were transient skin rash, lethargy, and
dizziness
. Two patients discontinued treatment because of cutaneous allergy.
Aminoglutethimide
can be considered a moderately active agent when utilized as second- or third-line hormonal therapy.
...
PMID:Aminoglutethimide in postmenopausal breast cancer refractory to multiple hormonal and cytostatic treatments. 366 Apr 75