Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (nausea)
23,468 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thirteen patients with advanced head and neck cancer were entered into a phase II study of fludarabine phosphate. Fludarabine phosphate was given by continuous infusion for 5 days, at a starting dose of 20 mg/m2 per day for patients previously treated with one regimen and 25 mg/m2 per day for previously untreated patients; therapy was repeated every 3-4 weeks. Of the 13 patients, 3 had undergone one prior regimen and 10 patients were previously untreated by chemotherapy. No responses were observed. Myelosuppression was the most common toxicity observed. Four patients developed mild nausea, vomiting and seven developed bleeding stomatitis that resolved in one week. In addition, four patients developed headaches which resolved spontaneously. No renal, hepatic, or neurotoxicity was observed. Our study demonstrates that in previously treated and untreated patients, fludarabine phosphate given on this schedule has little activity in patients with advanced head and neck cancer.
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PMID:Phase II trial of fludarabine phosphate (F-Ara-AMP) in patients with advanced head and neck cancer. 169 46

Since 1985 44 consecutive patients with testicular cancer have been treated with a modified BEP regimen. 70% had metastatic disease and 30% received adjuvant therapy. After mean follow-up of 26 (8-56) months, 91% of patients are alive and all are in remission. Chemotherapy-related side effects were alopecia (100%), myelosuppression (100%), nausea/vomiting (89%) and fever (66%). Patients reported nausea has been rare. It is concluded that BEP chemotherapy is a highly effective treatment which secures complete remission or cure even in patients with advanced metastatic disease. In retrospect the patients considered the treatment worthwhile despite the stress involved.
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PMID:[BEP-chemotherapy in patients with testicular tumors--is it worthwhile?]. 170 33

A phase I trial of fazarabine (ara-AC, 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl-5-azacytosine, NSC 281272) administered as a 24-h continuous infusion was performed in 24 adults with solid tumor malignancies. The majority of patients had received prior marrow-suppressive therapy. Level 7 (54.5 mg/m2/h for 24 h) was the maximum tolerated dose since during 6 evaluable first courses, 2 episodes of grade 4 granulocytopenia and 3 episodes of grade 3 occurred. Moderate thrombocytopenia also occurred at level 7 with 3 episodes of grade 1 and 1 episode of grade 4 thrombocytopenia during 6 first course treatments. Minimal myelosuppression, principally leukopenia, was seen prior to level 7. The nadir WBC through 47 courses had a linear relationship with plasma steady-state concentrations of ara-AC. The only other toxicity noted was moderate nausea/vomiting, which did not appear to be dose related. Plasma steady-state concentrations of ara-AC were reached in all patients within 4-6 h and ranged from 1.1 microM (11 mg/m2/h for 24 h) to 7.5 microM (54.5 mg/m2/h for 24 h). The mean total body clearance of ara-AC for 47 courses, levels 1-7, was 592 +/- 147 (SD) ml/min/m2 which is similar to prior pharmacokinetic data from the 24-h and 72-h infusion trials of the Pediatric and Medicine Branches, respectively. There were no objective disease responses during the trial. The recommended adult phase II dose for a 24-h infusion of ara-AC is 45-50 mg/m2/h.
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PMID:Phase I clinical trial of fazarabine as a twenty-four-hour continuous infusion. 170 65

Twenty-five patients, ranging from 21 to 61 years of age (median = 45 years), with histologically proven recurrent and advanced cervical cancer were treated with chemotherapy using a combination of bleomycin, ifosfamide, and cis-platinum (BIP). Twenty-one patients were evaluable for response. Ninety percent of patients achieved a subjective response. An objective response was noted in 14 of 21 (66.6%) patients: complete in 4 (19%) and partial in 10 (47.6%). Side effects were mainly nausea/vomiting, alopecia, myelosuppression, reversible encephalopathy, and impaired renal function. One patient died from the toxic effects of chemotherapy. These results indicate that BIP is an active combination in recurrent cervical cancer with acceptable toxicity.
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PMID:Chemotherapy in recurrent and advanced cervical cancer. 171 53

Cisplatin, bleomycin, and mitomycin-C were used to treat 25 patients with recurrent squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix. Six patients had a partial response, yielding a total response rate of 27%. Nine patients had stable disease. The median survival for the whole group was 30 weeks. The median survival for responders was 32 weeks. The median progression free interval for the whole group was 12 weeks and the median progression-free free interval for responders was 14 weeks. The toxicities noted were primarily nausea, vomiting, and myelosuppression. The combination of cisplatin, bleomycin, and mitomycin-C has modest effectiveness in the treatment of recurrent squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix, but represents no improvement over single-agent chemotherapy.
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PMID:A phase II evaluation of cisplatin, bleomycin, and mitomycin-C in patients with recurrent squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix. 170 24

Although testes cancer is the most common malignancy affecting young men, dramatic survival rates are now possible with the development of optimal individualised drug therapy. Human chorionic gonadotropin and alpha-fetoprotein are important tumour markers associated with testes cancer, and can provide essential information about prognosis and treatment efficacy. For treatment purposes, testicular germ-cell malignancies are broadly classified as seminomatous or non-seminomatous. Early stage seminomas are treated with radiotherapy, while more advanced disease requires systemic chemotherapy. Stage I nonseminoma patients can now be offered the option of retroperitoneal lymph node dissection (RPLND) or close clinical observation, while patients with stage II or III nonseminoma should generally be treated with chemotherapy. The dramatic survival rates now apparent with chemotherapy are due in large part to the introduction of cisplatin (cisplatinum II)-based chemotherapy and to the optimisation of therapy based on pretreatment risk analysis. The most common chemotherapeutic regimen for standard risk patients includes cisplatin and etoposide (VP 16213) and long term disease-free survival rates exceed 80%. A subset of poor risk patients with significantly reduced survival can be defined. These patients, and patients with relapsed or refractory disease, should receive more aggressive regimens, and ifosfamide (isophosphamide) is proving to be a particularly promising new agent in this regard. High-dose carboplatin with autologous bone marrow rescue is another encouraging alternative currently being investigated for these patients. Chemotherapy, despite substantial effectiveness, is not without toxicity, which consists primarily of myelosuppression, nausea and emesis, and renal toxicity. With careful monitoring and prophylaxis, however, these toxicities can generally be ameliorated or avoided.
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PMID:Optimal drug therapy in the treatment of testicular cancer. 171 85

Ifosfamide is an oxazaphosphorine alkylating agent with a broad spectrum of antineoplastic activity. It is a prodrug metabolised in the liver by cytochrome P450 mixed-function oxidase enzymes to isofosforamide mustard, the active alkylating compound. Mesna, a uroprotective thiol agent, is routinely administered concomitantly with ifosfamide, and has almost eliminated ifosfamide-induced haemorrhagic cystitis and has reduced nephron toxicity. Therapeutic studies, mostly noncomparative in nature, have demonstrated the efficacy of ifosfamide/mesna alone, or more commonly as a component of combination regimens, in a variety of cancers. In patients with relapsed or refractory disseminated nonseminomatous testicular cancer, a salvage regimen of ifosfamide/mesna, cisplatin and either etoposide or vinblastine produced complete response in approximately one-quarter of patients. As a component of both induction and salvage chemotherapeutic regimens, ifosfamide/mesna has produced favourable response rates in small cell lung cancer, paediatric solid tumours, non-Hodgkin's and Hodgkin's lymphoma, and ovarian cancer. Induction therapy with ifosfamide/mesna-containing chemotherapeutic regimens has been encouraging in non-small cell lung cancer, adult soft-tissue sarcomas, and as neoadjuvant therapy in advanced cervical cancer. As salvage therapy, ifosfamide/mesna-containing combinations have a palliative role in advanced breast cancer and advanced cervical cancer. Ifosfamide/mesna can elicit responses in patients refractory to numerous other antineoplastic drugs, including cyclophosphamide. With administration of concomitant mesna to protect against ifosfamide-induced urotoxicity, the principal dose-limiting toxicity of ifosfamide is myelosuppression; leucopenia is generally more severe than thrombocytopenia. Reversible CNS adverse effects ranging from mild somnolence and confusion to severe encephalopathy and coma can occur in approximately 10 to 20% of patients after intravenous infusion, and the incidence of neurotoxicity may be increased to 50% after oral administration because of differences in the preferential route of metabolism between the 2 routes of administration. Other adverse effects of ifosfamide include nephrotoxicity, alopecia, and nausea/vomiting. In general, intravenously administered mesna is associated with a low incidence of adverse effects; however, gastrointestinal disturbances are common following oral administration. Thus, ifosfamide/mesna is an important and worthwhile addition to the currently available range of chemotherapeutic agents. It has a broad spectrum of antineoplastic activity and causes less marked myelosuppression than many other cytotoxic agents. At present, the role of ifosfamide/mesna in refractory germ cell testicular cancer is clearly defined; however, its overall place in the treatment of other forms of cancer awaits delineation in future well-controlled comparative studies.
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PMID:Ifosfamide/mesna. A review of its antineoplastic activity, pharmacokinetic properties and therapeutic efficacy in cancer. 172 Mar 82

The NCI Canada Clinical Trials Group conducted a phase II study of menogaril given intravenously every 4 weeks in low-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Fifteen of 26 eligible patients had had no prior therapy. Partial responses were seen in 9 patients (35%). Toxicity was moderate including myelosuppression, nausea, phlebitis, alopecia, and lethargy. This drug has only modest activity in this potentially responsive group of patients.
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PMID:A phase II study of menogaril in low-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. An NCI Canada Clinical Trials Group study. 182 34

Nineteen patients with non-small cell lung cancer (eight patients with adenocarcinoma, nine patients with squamous cell carcinoma, one patient with large cell carcinoma and one patient with sarcoma) who had not received previous chemotherapy were treated with a combination of adriamycin (30 mg/m2, i.v., on day 1), cisplatin (80 mg/m2, i.v., on day 1) and etoposide (70 mg/m2, i.v., on day 1-5). This chemotherapy regimen was repeated as long as possible for patients in whom PR was induced. Among all patients, CR was induced in none and 6 showed a PR (response rate 32%). However, 4 (56%) squamous cell carcinoma patients also showed PR. The median response duration in 6 PR patients was 28 weeks, and the median survival time in all patients was also 28 weeks. Mild to severe hematologic toxicities were induced and one patient died during myelosuppression. However almost all cases were reversible. Other toxicities included alopecia, nausea/vomiting, diarrhea, stomatitis, peripheral neuropathy and myocardial infarction which were reversible and manageable. The APVp therapy may be a valuable regimen for non-small cell lung cancer, especially squamous cell carcinoma.
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PMID:[Adriamycin, cisplatin and etoposide combination chemotherapy in non-small cell lung cancer]. 184 90

This paper describes a randomised clinical trial in patients with advanced breast cancer, comparing the regimen 3M, mitomycin C 7-8 mg m-2 (day 1), mitozantrone 7-8 mg m-2 (day 1 and 21), methotrexate 35 mg m-2 (day 1 and 21) given on a 42 day cycle with a standard anthracycline containing regimen, VAC, vincristine 1.4 mg m-2 (day 1), anthracycline (adriamycin or epirubicin) 30 mg m-2 (day 1), cyclophosphamide 400 mg m-2 (day 1) given on a 21 day cycle. Of a total of 217 patients, 107 were randomised to 3M and 110 to VAC and a mean of 5.5 courses was given per patient. The overall response rate (complete and partial) was 53% (95% Confidence Limits (CL): 43-62%) for 3M and 49% (CL; 39-58%) for VAC. The response according to sites of metastases was the same for both treatment groups. Symptomatic toxicity including alopecia, neuropathy, vomiting (P less than 0.001) and nausea (P less than 0.01) were significantly less for 3M. Myelosuppression including leucopenia (P less than 0.001) and thrombocytopenia (P less than 0.001) was significantly greater with 3M at day 21, although there was no difference in nadir counts in patients at special risk of myelosuppression and there was no evidence of an increase in infective or bleeding complications. There was no significant difference in the duration of response to 3M (10 months, CL 6-15) and VAC (11 months, CL 7-12), nor in survival (3M, 8 months, CL 6-12; VAC, 10 months, CL 8-12). These results indicate that 3M is as effective as, but has significantly less symptomatic toxicity than, an anthracycline containing regimen for the treatment of advanced breast cancer.
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PMID:A randomised trial comparing combination chemotherapy using mitomycin C, mitozantrone and methotrexate (3M) with vincristine, anthracycline and cyclophosphamide (VAC) in advanced breast cancer. 189 75


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