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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Between July 2, 1987, and August 21, 1987, Cancer and
Leukemia
Group B (CALGB) conducted a phase II evaluation of carboplatin (CBDCA) and vinblastine (VBL) in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer. Of the 58 patients who entered the study, 55 were eligible and produced follow-up data. Chemotherapy, which was carried out in 28-day cycles, consisted of 4 mg/m2 VBL given on days 1 and 3 and 125 mg/m2 CBDCA given on days 1-3. Partial responses were observed in 10 cases (18%), and 1 patient (2%) exhibited regression of evaluable disease. No complete responses were achieved. The overall objective response rate was 20%. The median survival was 6.1 months, and the median time to treatment failure was 3.3 months. Life-threatening (grade 4) toxicity was mainly leukopenia (20%), followed by anemia (7%), infection (4%), thrombocytopenia (2%), fever (2%),
nausea and vomiting
(2%), and weight loss (2%). There were two deaths due to infection. The results of this study demonstrate that the combination CBDCA/VBL is active in advanced NSCLC; however, whether this combination is more active than either CBDCA or VBL alone is unknown.
...
PMID:Carboplatin and vinblastine in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer: a phase II study. 166 Mar 54
MOPP (mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine, prednisone) was the first successful regimen for the treatment of Hodgkin's disease. It has the longest period of follow-up and is best studied as to its benefits and acute and long-term side effects. The acute toxicity of the side effects, including
nausea and/or vomiting
, hair loss, and myelosuppression, may have been reason to modify doses of nitrogen mustard, an agent whose dose intensity may be critical in achieving long-term benefits. The substitution of chlorambucil and vinblastine in the ChlVPP (chlorambucil, vinblastine, procarbazine, prednisone) program has relieved all of these acute toxicities, except myelosuppression. The long-term toxicity of sterility, especially in males, and myelodysplasia is most likely due to alkylating-agent toxicity and would not be influenced by the various MOPP variants, such as MVPP (mechlorethamine, vinblastine, procarbazine, prednisone), ChlVPP, and COPP (chlorambucil-vincristine, procarbazine, prednisone). Doxorubicin-containing regimens, such as ABVD (doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, dacarbazine) and ABDIC (doxorubicin, bleomycin, dacarbazine, lomustine, prednisone), have been second-line treatments that have significant antitumor effect and, as such, have resulted in few, if any, long-term cures in most series. ABVD has been incorporated into alternating MOPP/ABVD schemes or in hybrids that attempt to offer all active agents, such as MOPP/ABV. The initial experience has been encouraging with high and durable complete remissions (CRs). MOPP/ABVD x 12(1) and MOPP-2/ABVD-2(2) have been compared with MOPP alone with a significant superiority for the alternating regimens. Other randomized trials have not shown any superiority for the alternating program. The Cancer and
Leukemia
Group B (CALGB) has compared MOPP with MOPP/ABVD given with a third arm of ABVD alone. The complete response and time-to-treatment failure rates for MOPP/ABVD and ABVD alone were superior to those for MOPP. Significant modifications of MOPP doses may explain the differences, since only 20% of patients were receiving full doses of nitrogen mustard by the sixth dose. ABVD has unique toxicity, and myelodysplasia and sterility are not seen. Pulmonary fibrosis with radiation and bleomycin is unique to ABVD, as shown in the ABVD experience at the NCl (Milan). Can ABVD be improved? The demonstrated single-dose activity of etoposide in Hodgkin's disease has prompted its inclusion in second-line programs, such as EVA (etoposide, vincristine or vinblastine, doxorubicin). The second-line response rates in the St Bartholomew's (London, England) series (where vincristine was used) was 11 of 19 patients (58%);3 in the ongoing CALGB trial of EVA (vinblastine combination), the response rate is 67%. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Can MOPP be replaced in the treatment of advanced Hodgkin's disease? 168 9
Patients suffering from malignant disease will probably develop some metabolic abnormality of electrolytes. Hypernatremia is defined as an elevation of serum natrium over 150 mEq/l and caused by decrease of water intake, low level of ADH secretion and impaired response of kidney to ADH. Hyponatremia below 135 mEq/l of serum natrium is caused by SI-DAH, sick cell syndrome and increased loss of natrium from the kidney. On the other hand, hyperkalemia is defined as an elevation of serum kalium over 5.0 mEq/l and caused by acute tumor cell lysis syndrome, adrenal and renal insufficiency. Hypokalemia is caused by kalium loss from kidney and hypersecretion of mineral corticoid. Hypercalcemia is found in the high frequency among patients with malignant disease. Hypercalcemia is defined as an elevation of serum calcium over 11.0 mg/dl, although the most important aspect is the level of ionized calcium. The excess calcium causes defective urinary concentration with polydipsia,
nausea and vomiting
leading to volume depletion. At serum calcium levels about 13.8 mg/dl, there may be rapid deterioration or renal function, dehydration, coma and cardiac arrhythmias. Hypercalcemia is rarely the first manifestation of cancer. There are three principle pathogenic causes of malignant hypercalcemia, 1) hypercalcemia is a feature of several hematological cancers, including Burkitt's lymphoma, T cell
leukemia
, but most commonly with myeloma. The hypercalcemia in these myeloma patients is due to the secretion of an osteoclast activator, a lymphokine by the myeloma cells. 2) all patients with bony metastases have biochemical evidence of increased bone resorption. However, not all patients with bony metastases develop hypercalcemia. Probably the hypercalcemia is due partially to increased renal tubular reabsorption of calcium, mediated by a humoral factor, with activity similar to that of parathormone. 3) hypercalcemia in the patients without bony metastases is due to increased bone resorption caused by the ectopic secretion by the tumor. Mildly symptomatic patients will benefit from modest salt loading. They are dehydrated and replacement of the extracellular fluid is the first line of treatment. This may require 4-10 l normal saline/24 h. In addition, frusemide will increase calcium excretion. Calcitonin may be given subcutaneously or intravenously to refuse the mobilisation of calcium from bone. Glucocorticoids are unhelpful, but will prolong the effect of calcitonin. A diphosphonate is also useful.
...
PMID:[Palliative therapy in cancer. 4. Palliation of the symptoms from a malignant tumor. (2)]. 169 56
In the present study we demonstrate that Aza-dC in combination with Amsacrine has major antileukaemic properties in patients who have not already received extensive Ara-C therapy. Eight out of 11 patients in their first relapse of acute
leukaemia
achieved complete remission. Cross resistance between Ara-C and Aza-dC was revealed by the lack of antileukaemic activity in five patients with with Ara-C resistant
leukaemia
. Combination therapy with Aza-dC/Ams-acrine induced a considerable period of a granulocytopenia (28-35 days), while the toxic effect on erythro- and megakaryopoiesis was comparable to that reported for high dose Ara-C/Amsacrine chemotherapy. Remarkable is the long disappearance time for leukaemic blast cells in bone marrow, i.e. 3-5 weeks in some cases. Analysis of cell membrane markers showed a loss of the early differentiation antigens CD34 and CD33 from leukaemic bone marrow cells after 7 days of Aza-dC treatment, which is suggestive of leukaemic cell differentiation. In the small group of patients tested for DNA hypomethylation no association existed between the degree of hypomethylation and clinical response. Non-haematologic side effects were considerable in patients receiving the highest dosages of Aza-dC and consisted of severe, although usually reversible, gastrointestinal and neurological complications. In comparison with Ara-C, Aza-dC causes less
nausea and vomiting
and is therefore better tolerated.
...
PMID:The antileukaemic activity of 5-Aza-2 deoxycytidine (Aza-dC) in patients with relapsed and resistant leukaemia. 171 50
ICRF-187 is the (+) enantiomer of the racemic mixture razoxane (ICRF-159). This compound is much more water soluble and thus could be formulated for parental use. The maximum tolerated dose in children after phase I trials was determined to be 3500 mg/M2/day x 3 days. A phase II trial of ICRF-187 was done in 21 children with solid tumors and 35 children with acute leukemia. All these patients were less than 21 years of age, had recovered from previous chemotherapy, had normal liver and kidney functions, and had a life expectancy of greater than 4 weeks. ICRF-187 was administered at a dose of 3 g/M2/day for 3 days as a 4 hour infusion each day. In patients with
leukemia
, no objective response was seen in the bone marrow although a few patients had a decrease in peripheral blast count. There were no measurable responses seen in patients with a solid tumor. ICRF-187 was well tolerated. The major toxicity was hematopoietic depression. Significant but rare toxicities included moderate to severe
nausea and vomiting
, and elevation of bilirubin and transaminases. Although inactive in the current study, ICRF-187 might be more active in another schedule.
...
PMID:Phase II trial of ICRF-187 in children with solid tumors and acute leukemia. 180 8
Didemnin B is a depsipeptide extracted from the marine tunicate Trididemnin cyanophorum. This agent is a potent inhibitor of L1210 growth in vitro and has activity against murine B16 melanoma, P388
leukemia
, and M5076 sarcoma in vivo. The results of preclinical toxicologic tests demonstrated abnormalities in clotting parameters thought to be secondary to drug-induced liver dysfunction. Thirty-five patients with advanced cancer received didemnin B according to a 5-day bolus schedule with dose levels ranging from 0.03 to 2.00 mg/m2/d. The dose-limiting toxicity was
nausea and vomiting
. Sporadic elevation of the hepatic enzyme level occurred but was not dose limiting. Two patients had anaphylactic symptoms possibly related to the 5% polyoxyethylated castor oil (Cremophor EL, BASF, Ludwigshafen, Germany) vehicle during the drug infusion. Clinical bleeding was not observed and myelosuppression was not significant. No partial or complete tumor responses were seen. The recommended Phase II dose for the 5-day schedule is 1.6 mg/m2/d.
...
PMID:A phase I clinical trial of didemnin B. 193 1
Carboplatin (CBDCA) is a second-generation platinum drug that has been shown to be useful when used as a continuous infusion in treatment of refractory adult
leukemia
. We report on the effectiveness of continuous infusion CBDCA, 300 mg/m2/d x 5 days, as evaluated in nine patients with secondary acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) (seven previous myelodysplastic syndrome and two treatment-associated ANLL), three ANLL patients in first relapse, six refractory ANLL, and nine patients with blastic phase of chronic myelogenous leukemia (BP-CML). All patients were considered assessable. The response rate was 44% (eight complete remissions [CRs], four partial remissions [PRs]). Median duration of postchemotherapy neutropenia was 36 days (range, 18 to 45). Therapy was well tolerated, and toxicity was mainly hematologic and nondose-limiting. Despite prolonged neutropenia, severe infections were rarely seen, and most patients were managed as outpatients. Twelve patients had
nausea and vomiting
, two had symptomatic hypomagnesemia, and one patient showed reversible ototoxicity. Because of substantial antileukemic activity and unusual extrahematologic toxicity, CBDCA appears to be an effective second-line agent in the treatment of ANLL and should be considered for upgrading to first-line treatment regimens.
...
PMID:A phase II clinical trial of carboplatin infusion in high-risk acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia. 198 71
A pilot study was performed to investigate the toxicity, pharmacokinetics and therapeutic effect of intrathecally administered radiolabelled monoclonal antibody (MAb) in patients with meningeal acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia
(ALL). Six children aged 3-16, in second or subsequent central nervous system (CNS) relapse of ALL, received between 629 and 1480 MBq of 131Iodine conjugated to either MAb HD37 (CD19, n = 2) or WCMH15.14 (CD10, n = 4). Conjugate was administered as a single injection either via an Ommaya reservoir (n = 4) or by lumbar puncture (n = 2). Acute toxicity was manifest by headache (n = 4),
nausea and vomiting
(n = 4) and pyrexia (n = 2). All acute symptoms resolved within 72 h. Transient myelosuppression occurred in three patients. Pharmacokinetic studies included investigation of whole body, blood and CSF clearance of isotope. 131I was seen to clear from the CSF by biexponential kinetics. Five patients responded to therapy. In four, the CSF became clear of blast cells at both 2 and 4 weeks following antibody injection, but evidence of relapse was seen at 6 weeks. The fifth patient, with blast cells present on a cytospin preparation, responded to therapy over an 8-week period but relapsed at 12 weeks. This study demonstrates the potential of targeted radiotherapy in CNS ALL, but further studies are necessary to increase the length of remission.
...
PMID:A pilot study of monoclonal antibody targeted radiotherapy in the treatment of central nervous system leukaemia in children. 202 71
Cisplatin and teniposide given by intraperitoneal (IP) route exert a synergistic therapeutic effect against ascitic P388
leukemia
in mice. As single agents, they display different dose-limiting toxicities and favourable pharmacokinetic characteristics in IP phase I trials. We administered cisplatin (fixed dose: 200 mg/m2) and teniposide (escalating doses) by IP route without dwell-time to investigate the toxicity, pharmacokinetics and clinical activity of this 2-drug combination. Nine patients received a total of 14 courses. Myelosuppression,
nausea and vomiting
were the most frequent toxicities. Leukopenia was the dose-limiting toxicity. The maximum tolerated dose of teniposide was 100 mg/m2 when administered with a fixed dose of 200 mg/m2 cisplatin. Pharmacokinetic analysis showed that the main parameters of both cisplatin and teniposide in the peritoneum and in the plasma were not modified when the drugs were combined. It appears that a pharmacodynamic interaction exists between cisplatin and teniposide which results in increased hematologic toxicity. Although an objective response has been observed in one patient with refractory ovarian cancer, such association should not be applicable for further clinical development due to marked toxicity and the low dose of teniposide recommended.
...
PMID:Teniposide and cisplatin given by intraperitoneal administration: preclinical and phase I/pharmacokinetic studies. 204 92
2'-Deoxycoformycin (DCF) is an experimental drug with specific lymphocytotoxic activity which has proved effective in the treatment of some lymphoproliferative syndromes (LPS). This paper deals with the results achieved in 6 patients with LPS, five of them with T-cell and one with B-cell malignancies, who received DCF as initial (2 cases) or salvage (4 cases) therapy. One patient with adult T-cell
leukaemia
-lymphoma achieved complete remission maintained for 36 months of follow-up; partial remission was attained in three others and the remaining two patients failed to respond to the treatment. Kidney toxicity was seen in three cases, and in two of them it was necessary to stop the treatment. Kidney toxicity was seen in three cases, and in two of them it was necessary to stop the treatment. Other untoward effects included
nausea and vomiting
(2 patients), myoclonus, dysaesthesia of the limbs and conjunctivitis arida (one case each). No haematologic or infectious complications were present in association with DCF treatment.
...
PMID:[Treatment of various lymphoproliferative syndromes with deoxycoformycin: results in 6 patients]. 208 59
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