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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Systemic therapy of encephalitis with human interferon-beta regularly causes fever up to more than 41 degrees C. Patients often developed hematological changes,
nausea
and tachycardia. Analyzing the temperature curves of 13 patients with repeated intrathecal, lumbar instillations of 1.0 x 10(6) IU natural
IFN-beta
, we found markedly less drug-associated fever. Mean temperature was maximal at 38.7 degrees C 12 h after instillation; individual temperature did not exceed 39.7 degrees C, and was elevated for less than 36 h. Day-time of application did not change these results. After the first
IFN-beta
instillations, the mean integral of temperature vs time was twice as high as after subsequent applications. One and a half days after intrathecal administration and from 39 degrees C on, fever is independent from lumbar
IFN-beta
. Lower dosage, a more than ten-fold reduction of costs and less interference led us to prefer intrathecal interferon-beta applications. Given the data presented, we cannot yet evaluate clinical efficacy of intrathecal
IFN-beta
.
...
PMID:Less drug fever with intrathecally applied interferon-beta (short communication). 202 67
Fourteen evaluable patients with diffuse malignant mesothelioma were treated with a once-a-day for 5 days out of 7 for 6 weeks regimen of recombinant interferon-beta (
IFN-beta
ser). No responses were noted. The major toxicities included fever, chills,
nausea
, vomiting, and anorexia.
IFN-beta
ser at this dose and schedule does not appear to be an active single agent for patients with refractory malignant mesothelioma.
...
PMID:Phase II evaluation of recombinant interferon-beta (IFN-beta ser) in patients with diffuse mesothelioma: a Southwest Oncology Group study. 227 99
We administered doses of 5 to 180 x 10(6) IU of beta-serine-interferon (
IFN-beta
ser17) twice weekly to 20 patients with recurrent malignant gliomas in a Phase I study. Interferon was given through an Ommaya reservoir connected by a catheter to the tumor cavity. Side effects of interferon therapy occurred in only one patient and consisted of
nausea
, vomiting, fever, and chills after each treatment, presumably due to rapid diffusion of interferon into ventricular cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Problems with the Ommaya reservoir (obstruction in two patients and infection in four patients) led to six patients being terminated from the study, and represent the major difficulty with this form of therapy. Although this was primarily a study of interferon toxicity, of 12 evaluable patients, 3 had stable disease for 148, 192, and 539 days; 9 had progressive disease. In addition, we tested the effect of
IFN-beta
ser17 on the growth of early passage in vitro cultures of malignant gliomas established from patients. Growth inhibition varied from 0% to more than 50%. In all cultures evaluated, the combination of recombinant gamma-interferon plus
IFN-beta
ser17 enhanced growth inhibition. Further clinical and laboratory study is necessary to better define the therapeutic efficacy of
IFN-beta
ser17 and the role of combinations of interferons in the treatment of malignant gliomas.
...
PMID:Intratumor administration of beta-interferon in recurrent malignant gliomas. A phase I clinical and laboratory study. 229 73
Based upon in vitro and in vivo synergistic activity of Type I and Type II interferons (IFNs) in preclinical in vitro and in vivo studies, we initiated a phase I trial evaluating the doses, safety, and pharmacokinetics of combinations of recombinant DNA-produced human
IFN-beta
ser and IFN-gamma in 27 patients with cancer. Twenty-four patients were treated with a 2-hour infusion of IFN-gamma, followed by a 10-minute iv injection of
IFN-beta
ser, three times a week. Patients were entered on fixed dose levels of 1 X 10(6), 3 X 10(6), 10 X 10(6), 30 X 10(6), and 100 X 10(6) units of each IFN. In addition, three patients were treated at the highest dose level with a 10-minute iv infusion of IFN-gamma and a 10-minute iv infusion of
IFN-beta
ser. The maximally tolerated dose when administered by this schedule for greater than or equal to 4 weeks was 30 X 10(6) units of each IFN. Dose-limiting side effects at doses of 100 X 10(6) units of each IFN consisted of fatigue,
nausea
, vomiting, anorexia, paralytic ileus, and neutropenia. The most common side effects at the three highest dose levels were fever, rigors often requiring parenteral meperidine, and constitutional symptoms. Reversible elevations in SGOT and LDH were also noted. Serum IFN levels were dose related, with peak titers occurring immediately after IFN administration. One patient with a nodular mixed lymphoma had a partial response which has been sustained for over 1 year. We conclude that combinations of
IFN-beta
ser and IFN-gamma can be safely administered on a chronic basis without enhanced or cumulative toxic effects.
...
PMID:Phase I trial of combinations of recombinant interferons beta(ser) and gamma in patients with advanced malignancy. 311 70
Nine patients with metastatic breast cancer received 30 x 10(6) I.U. of Interferon - Betaser (
Betaseron
) intravenously daily times five for two consecutive weeks followed by a two week rest period. Only one patient received more than one such cycle of
Betaseron
. The drug was well tolerated in eight of these patients. One patient, with liver metastases and liver dysfunction, developed hepatic decompensation during therapy. Toxicity consisted of anorexia, chills, fever, fatigue and
nausea
with an occasional patient having emesis. One patient developed severe thrombocytopenia, two, significant leukopenia and nine, mild elevations of serum transaminase. Two patients developed beta interferon binding antibodies but none developed neutralizing antibodies. No anti-tumor responses were seen and disease progression occurred rapidly during the four week cycle in eight of nine patients.
...
PMID:Phase II trial of recombinant beta (IFN-betaser) interferon in the treatment of metastatic breast cancer. 319 87
Partially purified human beta interferon (HuIFN-beta) was administered to six patients with metastatic breast carcinoma by the intramuscular route at doses of 3 X 10(6) and 6 X 10(6) units on a daily schedule. Objective antitumor effects were observed in three patients (one partial remission, two minor responses) in soft tissue and lymph node metastases. Systemic side effects (fatigue, fever, pruritus,
nausea
, etc.) attributable to the treatment occurred in all patients. Augmenting effects by
IFN-beta
on cell-mediated immunity in vivo (delayed-type hypersensitivity) and in vitro natural killer cell and antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity were observed in several patients. The clinical and immunological effects were considered evidence of systemic biological activity despite very low or undetectable serum antiviral activity following administration of this agent.
...
PMID:Clinical and immunological study of beta interferon by intramuscular route in patients with metastatic breast cancer. 714 62
Fifteen patients with stage II, IIIA, and IIIB non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) received subcutaneous (s.c.) recombinant, glycosylated, human interferon-beta 1a (Rebif; rHuIFN-beta 1a) on each day of conventionally fractionated radiation therapy (RT) given in 2.0 Gy fractions to 60 Gy in 6 weeks. The rHuIFN-beta 1a was generated in CHO cells by recombinant DNA technology and is identical to natural
IFN-beta
produced by fibroblasts in primary sequence and glycosylation. Cohorts of three patients each were treated with escalating doses of rHuIFN-beta 1a: 1.5, 3, 6, 12, and 24 MIU/m2 per treatment day. Acute toxicity was assessed according to modified WHO criteria; late toxicity was graded using RTOG late toxicity criteria. The maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of rHuIFN-beta 1a was defined as the dose level immediately below that in which dose-limiting toxicity occurred in > or = two of six patients. Immunomodulatory effects and antigenicity of rHuIFN-beta 1a were assessed by 2-5A synthetase, beta 2-microglobulin, and neopterin levels and by measurement of anti-rHuIFN-beta antibodies, respectively. Fourteen of fifteen patients experienced grades 1-3 acute (early) toxicity (< or = 90 days), which was primarily gastrointestinal: dysphagia/esophagitis (14/15),
nausea
/vomiting (12/15), anorexia (7/15), and liver transaminasemia (6/15). One of three patients treated with 24 MIU/m2 per treatment day (total rHuIFN-beta 1a dose 672 MIU) died of complications secondary to pneumonia, sepsis, adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), and radiation pneumonitis. Twelve patients were evaluable for late toxicity (> 90 days). Maximum toxicity was grade 0 in five patients, grade 1 in four patients, and grade 5 in one patient (radiation pneumonitis). Clinical responses from the combination were 1/15 CR, 6/15 PR, 6/15 stable disease, and 1/15 progressive disease. The MTD of rHuIFN-beta 1a has been estimated at 12 MIU/m2 per treatment day when given daily during conventional RT to 60 Gy in 6 weeks. Biologic response by rHuIFN-beta 1a alone was reflected by significant and dose-related increases in 2-5A synthetase, beta 2-microglobulin, and neopterin. Radiation therapy alone had no effect on these immune response parameters and did not diminish their augmentation by rHuIFN-beta 1a. There was no association of biologic modulation with clinical response or survival.
...
PMID:Recombinant human interferon-beta (rHuIFN-beta) and radiation therapy for inoperable non-small cell lung cancer. 893 64
To evaluate the safety, toxicity, and maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of IFN beta-1a (Rebif, Serono Laboratories, Inc.) in patients with malignant diseases unresponsive to standard therapies and to assess the pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics associated with IFN beta-1a administration, an open-label, single-center phase I study was designed. Thirty-four patients were enrolled and treated with IFN beta-1a. All had measurable solid neoplasms or evaluable hematological malignancies. All patients received a single i.v. bolus dose of
IFN-beta
-1a on day 1, followed 7 days later by daily s.c. injections for 28 consecutive days. Successive groups of three patients received increasingly higher doses (in geometric progression from 1.5 million international units (MIU)/m2 to 24 MIU/m2) until dose-limiting toxicities were noted. Pharmacokinetic and biological studies, including measurement of the activity of 2',5'-oligoadenylate synthetase (2',5'-OAS) in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and serum levels of soluble Tac (CD 25) and beta-2 microglobulin, were performed on patients who agreed to participate. i.v. and s.c. doses of IFN beta-1a up to 24 MIU/m2 were administered. The most frequent adverse events (AEs) were constitutional symptoms. Grade III AEs during i.v. dosing included fever, elevation of bilirubin, and infection unrelated to therapy. No grade IV events were seen. AEs noted during continuous s.c. therapy included fever, liver transaminase increase, albuminuria, fatigue,
nausea
, myalgia, and rigors. Dose-limiting toxicities were encountered during s.c. dosing at the 24-MIU/m2 and 18-MIU/m2 dose levels and included gastrointestinal toxicity, elevations of aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase, and albuminuria. The s.c. MTD was determined to be 12 MIU/m2, although there was great variability in the individual patient's ability to tolerate IFN beta-1a. 2',5'-OAS activity, thought to be indicative of IFN activity, increased within hours after i.v. and s.c. dosing, with the level remaining persistently elevated during the s.c. daily injections. The highest peak level was attained in the 6-MIU/m2 group. There was no evidence that the increase in 2',5'-OAS activity decayed with repetitive dosing, nor was there evidence of accumulation in this pharmacodynamic marker. Serum beta-2-microglobulin levels showed a modest time- and dose-dependent increase after s.c. administration of IFN beta-1a, with the largest increase seen at the 24-MIU/m2 dose level. There were no clear dose-dependent responses noted in soluble Tac serum levels. IFN beta-1a was well-tolerated when administered by a single i.v. bolus injection at doses up to and including 24 MIU/m2. Daily s.c. injections for at least 28 days were well-tolerated at doses up to and including 12 MIU/m2, with some patients tolerating doses twice as high as this. The MTD for the i.v. route could not be clearly determined according to the guidelines of the protocol. However, i.v. bolus doses up to 24 MIU/m2 were relatively well-tolerated. For the s.c. route, the MTD was determined to be 12 MIU/m2, but there was great interpatient variability, with some patients able to tolerate higher doses.
...
PMID:A phase I study of recombinant interferon-beta in patients with advanced malignant disease. 1063 30