Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Idarubicin is an anthracycline agent available as both oral and intravenous formulations. The oral formulation has demonstrated efficacy in the treatment of advanced breast cancer, low-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, myelodysplastic syndromes and as first-line induction therapy of acute myelogenous leukaemia where intravenous anthracycline treatment is precluded. It also has potential in ameliorating blast crisis of chronic myelogenous leukaemia and in multiple myeloma. The most frequent adverse effects associated with oral idarubicin are those commonly found with anthracyclines, namely myelosuppression, nausea and vomiting, diarrhoea and mucositis. There appears to be minimal significant cardiotoxicity with oral idarubicia. In summary; available data concerning oral idarubicin in haematological malignancies and advanced breast cancer are sufficiently encouraging to warrant further research. To maximise the use of oral idarubicin, future studies should define the optimal dose for elderly patients, its comparative efficacy with other available regimens and address quality-of-life and pharmacoeconomic issues associated with the substitution of oral for intravenous chemotherapy.
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PMID:Oral idarubicin. A review of its pharmacological properties and clinical efficacy in the treatment of haematological malignancies and advanced breast cancer. 923 41

Two hundred fifty-three patients with newly diagnosed acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) were eligible to enter the multicentric GIMEMA-AIEOP "AIDA" trial during the period July 1993 to February 1996. As a mandatory prerequisite for eligibility, all patients had genetic evidence of the specific t(15;17) lesion in their leukemic cells confirmed by karyotyping or by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) of the PML/RAR alpha fusion gene (the latter available in 247 cases). Median age was 37.8 years (range, 2.2 to 73.9). Induction treatment consisted of oral all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA), 45 mg/m2/d until complete remission (CR), given with intravenous Idarubicin, 12 mg/m2/d on days 2, 4, 6, and 8. Three polychemotherapy cycles were given as consolidation. Hematologic and molecular response by RT-PCR was assessed after induction and after consolidation. At the time of analysis, 240 of the 253 eligible patients were evaluable for induction. Of these, 11 (5%) died of early complications and 229 (95%) achieved hematologic remission. No cases of resistant leukemia were observed. Of 139 cases studied by RT-PCR after induction, 84 (60.5%) were PCR-negative and 55 (39.5%) PCR-positive. One hundred sixty-two patients were evaluable by RT-PCR at the end of consolidation. Of these, 159 (98%) tested PCR-negative and 3 (2%), PCR-positive. After a median follow up of 12 months (range, 0 to 33), the estimated actuarial event-free survival for the whole series of 253 eligible patients was 83% +/- 2.6% and 79% +/- 3.2% at 1 and 2 years, respectively. This study indicates that the AIDA protocol is a well-tolerated regimen that induces molecular remission in almost all patients with PML/RAR alpha-positive APL. Preliminary survival data suggest that a remarkable cure rate can be obtained with this treatment.
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PMID:Molecular remission in PML/RAR alpha-positive acute promyelocytic leukemia by combined all-trans retinoic acid and idarubicin (AIDA) therapy. Gruppo Italiano-Malattie Ematologiche Maligne dell'Adulto and Associazione Italiana di Ematologia ed Oncologia Pediatrica Cooperative Groups. 924 31

Idarubicin is the first anthracycline that can be successfully administered via the oral route and thus may facilitate antineoplastic chemotherapy in an improved quality of life. These perspectives are somewhat hampered by the large variation in bioavailability between individual patients and the obvious requirement to monitor plasma concentration and area-under-the-curve values (AUC) for an appropriate adjustment of idarubicin dose. In this study we describe the pharmacokinetics of idarubicin and its main metabolite idarubicinol in 12 patients after oral application of 20 mg/m2 idarubicin on 3 consecutive days and demonstrate that the 24 h trough levels show a high correlation with AUC and may thus allow a rapid and easy determination of individual drug concentrations and an appropriate dose adjustment. The average terminal half-life was 30.5 h for idarubicin and 66.9 h for idarubicinol. The AUC for idarubicin and its main metabolite idarubicinol revealed a substantial interpatient variation with AUC values ranging from 25.7 to 114 ng x h/ml (average 58.1 ng x h/ml) for idarubicin and from 109.4-445.2 ng x h/ml (average 287.3 ng x h/ml) for idarubicinol. However, the ratio of idarubicin/idarubicinol differed only two folds from 1:3.7 to 1:7.7 with an average of 1:5.1. Both idarubicin and idarubicinol concentrations were highly reproducible, however, upon measurements after repeated applications within individual patients. Moreover, idarubicinol and idarubicin AUCs showed a good correlation with r = 0.78, indicating that the interindividual variation of idarubicin AUC reflects differences in absorption rather than in metabolism. In order to describe the interindividual bioavailability of idarubicin - represented by the respective AUC - measurement of a single data point with a high correlation with the AUC would be ideal. Our study demonstrates that the 24 h trough level shows such an excellent correlation (r = 0.96) with AUC, making it the perfect candidate for fast estimates of the individual bioavailability in a given patient. On this basis, the longitudinal measurement of the 24 h trough level may allow assessment of the impact of interindividual variations in AUC on clinical outcome and toxicity.
Leukemia 1997 Dec
PMID:Oral idarubicin pharmacokinetics--correlation of trough level with idarubicin area under curve. 943 33

In order to replace the central venous line necessary for continuous infusion of vincristine and doxorubicin with high-dose dexamethasone (VAD) and to avoid hospitalization, we evaluated the efficacy and toxicity of oral idarubicin, vincristine and dexamethasone (VID) in patients with multiple myeloma. Vincristine (1.6 mg/m2, max 2 mg) was given as a bolus injection on day 1. Idarubicin was given in capsules 10 mg/m2/day for days 1-4 with an intraindividual dose escalation, 40 mg dexamethasone were given on days 1-4, 9-12, 17-20. Treatment cycles were repeated every 28 days. At this interim analysis, 53 patients have been entered into the ongoing trial; 46 patients are evaluable for toxicity. The median age was 60 years (interquartile range, 52-65). 46% were primary or secondary refractory, 20% had previously been treated with VAD and 30% had previously untreated disease, 4% had two or more relapses. Four patients died within 2 months from entry and were considered as early deaths (8.7%). 45% of the 42 patients evaluable for efficacy achieved a partial remission and 26% a minor remission. The median reduction of the M-component was 43% (interquartile range, 25-64%). VID is an effective and convenient alternative to VAD even in relapsed or refractory patients.
Leukemia 1997 Dec
PMID:Oral idarubicin, dexamethasone and vincristine (VID) in the treatment of multiple myeloma. 943 34

Idarubicin (4-demethoxydaunorubicin) is more potent and less cardiotoxic than daunorubicin or doxorubicin. These properties suggested a role in acute myelogenous leukaemia, that was confirmed by prospective randomized trials. In acute lymphoblastic leukaemia of adults, on the contrary, there is very little information regarding idarubicin. We have used idarubicin since 1991 and found, in a retrospective comparison with a doxorubicin regimen, a decreased incidence of primarily refractory disease. The role of idarubicin in the postremission phase could not be assessed in detail but an early intensive use of anthracyclines, either idarubicin or doxorubicin, was associated with an improved outcome in early-B CD10+ and t(9;22)/BCR-leukaemias. Concurrent in vitro studies demonstrated that idarubicin, at pharmacologically relevant concentrations, was less sensitive to P-glycoprotein-mediated drug efflux than daunorubicin and was a more effective agent to use with cyclosporin-A to circumvent this drug resistance mechanism. Idarubicin is a very effective drug for the early management of adult acute lymphoblastic leukaemia and may be presently considered (along with cyclosporin-A or other modulator) as the reference anthracycline for cases overexpressing the P-glycoprotein drug resistance mechanism.
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PMID:The role of idarubicin in adult acute lymphoblastic leukaemia: from drug resistance studies to clinical application. 957 Jun 85

The major cause of treatment failure following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for acute leukaemia is disease relapse. In an attempt to reduce post- transplant relapse in 33 children with high-risk acute leukaemia who received a related or unrelated bone marrow transplant, the pre-transplant conditioning regimen was intensified by the addition of idarubicin. Its toxicity and effects on survival were evaluated over a 57-month period. Toxicity, largely gastrointestinal, was increased but acceptable, and there was no specific regimen-related toxicity. Relapse rates were low (24%) in this high risk group, but mortality was increased in those receiving unrelated donor grafts, largely due to sepsis. Idarubicin does appear to have a role to play in the conditioning regimen of patients with high-risk acute leukaemia undergoing BMT, and may reduce relapse rates without increasing transplant-related mortality.
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PMID:Use of idarubicin in pre-transplant conditioning in children with high-risk acute leukaemia. 1055 53

The association of leukemia and multiple myeloma is well described usually as a complication of chemotherapy but also in the absence of chemotherapy or at diagnosis. Such leukemias are typically acute myeloid leukemia (AML), particularly myelomonocytic subtype, and cases of acute promyelocytic leuke (APL) are rarely reported. Controversy exists as to whether myeloma and AML originate from a single haematopoietic progenitor or arise from different cell lineages. We report a case of a 58 year old female who developed APL 10 months following diagnosis of nonsecretory light chain (kappa) myeloma which had been treated with local spinal irradiation and low dose oral melphalan and prednisone. Clonality had originally been demonstrated by light chain restriction (kappa) of her bone marrow plasma cells whilst immunoglobulin heavy chain and T cell receptor genes were germ line. At development of APL cytogenetics revealed t(15;17) and PML-RAR fusion gene was detected by RT-PCR. The patient was treated with all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) and received 2 cycles of consolidation chemotherapy with Idarubicin. Following this therapy the t(15;17) and PML-RAR were both undetectable whilst the clonal population of kappa staining plasma cells persisted. This particular patient represents a rare case of APL complicating multiple myeloma with persistence of the myeloma clone but disappearance of PML-RAR alpha RNA following therapy. This case study appears to support the argument that the APL and myeloma originated from distinct cell lineages.
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PMID:Acute promyelocytic leukaemia complicating multiple myeloma: evidence of different cell lineages. 1060 2

A total of 622 consecutive patients with acute promyelocytic leukaemia (APL) treated within the Gruppo Italiano per le Malattie Ematologiche dell'Adulto (GIMEMA) group during 1989-97 have been reviewed to assess the clinical effectiveness of all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) on the incidence of early haemorrhagic deaths and on APL-associated coagulopathy. Of them, 499 were treated with idarubicin plus ATRA (study A) and 123 with Idarubicin alone (study B). In both studies, similar guidelines for supportive treatment were used. Haemorrhagic symptoms were evaluated according to a reproducible score system. Deaths occurring within 10 d of starting treatment were 19 (3.8%) in study A and nine (7.3%) in study B (P = 0.09), with 15 (3%) and five (4.1%) (P not significant) due to haemorrhage. Overall, induction mortality was 7.6% and 16.2% respectively (P < 0.003). In study A, days with platelet counts </= 20 x 109/l or with fibrinogen </= 1 g/L were reduced by about 30%, the haemorrhagic score by 50% and the consumption of blood products by about 40%, and fewer patients were treated with antihaemorrhagic drugs (39% vs. 61%; P < 0.001). On multivariate analysis, early deaths were influenced by blast count at diagnosis > 30 x 109/l (P < 0.001) in both studies, and by a haemorrhagic score of 3 in study A (P < 0.001). Although the reduction of early fatal haemorrhages was not significant, a substantial clinical improvement was evident in terms of reduction of the severity of bleeding symptoms, blood product consumption and overall induction mortality when ATRA was combined with idarubicin.
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PMID:Early haemorrhagic morbidity and mortality during remission induction with or without all-trans retinoic acid in acute promyelocytic leukaemia. 1079 70

TP-53 deficient cells of human leukaemia HL-60 die by massive apoptosis after treatment by high (50-100 nmol/l) doses of DNA damaging agent Idarubicin, regardless of the cell-cycle phase, in which they are affected. In contrary, after relatively low dose 10 nmol/l the cells die after cell-cycle arrest in G2 phase. The results show, that apoptosis induced by idarubicin could appear independently of the cell-cycle phase and that period in which apoptosis is observed is related to the dose of Idarubicin.
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PMID:Dose dependent biological effects of idarubicin in HL-60 cells: alterations of the cell-cycle and apoptosis. 1095 80

Forty-nine adult patients with high-risk myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) or acute myeloid leukemia that progressed from MDS were registered for the multicenter study of the Japan Adult Leukemia Study Group. Forty-three patients were evaluable for the analysis. Idarubicin 12 mg/m2 per day for 3 days and continuous cytosine arabinoside 100 mg/m2 per day for 7 days were given as induction therapy, followed by postremission chemotherapy after complete remission (CR). Because elderly patients and those with hypoplastic marrow usually have complications after intensive chemotherapy, often causing early death, the treatment dose was reduced to 60% or 80% according to the presence of 3 risk factors: age 60 years or older, performance status 2 or more, or presence of hypoplastic bone marrow. Of the 43 evaluable patients (median age, 58 years), 26 (60%) achieved CR. Two patients (5%) died within 2 months of completion of induction therapy. The CR rates for patients treated with 100%, 80%, and 60% of the chemotherapy dose were 55% (12 of 22), 63% (10 of 16), and 80% (4 of 5), respectively, indicating that the risk factor-adjusted dose attenuation was appropriately applied to those who might have had problems with the original dose, thus reducing regimen-related mortality rate. The median overall survival of the 43 patients was 8 months.
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PMID:Combination chemotherapy with risk factor-adjusted dose attenuation for high-risk myelodysplastic syndrome and resulting leukemia in the multicenter study of the Japan Adult Leukemia Study Group (JALSG): results of an interim analysis. 1103 69


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