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

Colorectal cancers (CRC) express the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R), a type I transmembrane receptor with tyrosine kinase activity. EGF-R signaling inhibition is a promising target for cancer therapy. ZD1839 (Iressa, AstraZeneca) and OSI-774 (Tarceva, Roche) are small molecular weight molecules with selective and reversible tyrosine kinase inhibition properties directed to EGF-R. Orally administered, these molecules induce sustained tumor stabilizations in previously treated metastatic CRC patients. The most frequent treatment-related toxicities are fatigue, diarrhea and acne-like follicular rash. The addition in the clinic of 5-FU, lOHP or CPT-11 to ZD1839 or OSI-774 does not seem to increase the own toxicity of each cytotoxic agents. Cetuximab (Erbitux, Merck) is an intravenously administered humanized monoclonal antibody which bind with high affinity with the extracellular domain of the EGF-R. The most frequent treatment-related toxicities are diarrhea, fatigue, nausea and cutaneous toxicity (allergic or acne-like follicular rashes, folliculitis). Most, if not all of these adverse events are mild. Partial responses were observed with cetuximab either alone (RR: 10%) or in combination with CPT-11 (RR: 22%) in patients with CPT-11 refractory advanced CRC which expressed EGF-R. The combination of cetuximab to folinic acid, 5-FU and CPT-11 seems tolerable at the cost of a slight increase of severe diarrhea and neutropenia. Finally, the promising activity of these EGF-R inhibitors has to be confirmed throughout randomized studies.
...
PMID:[Inhibitors of epidermal growth factor receptor and colorectal cancer]. 1476 44

(1) Platinum-based chemotherapy is generally used to treat advanced-stage non small-cell lung cancer (stages III and IV), but has only a modest impact on survival. There is no reference treatment. (2) Gefitinib inhibits the tyrosine kinase activity of the receptor for EGF (epidermal growth factor), which is thought to be involved in tumour growth. It has a temporary licence in France and is used on a named-patient basis, but full marketing authorisation has already been granted in Japan, the United States, and elsewhere. (3) Two double-blind dose-finding studies compared two doses of oral gefitinib monotherapy (250 mg/day and 500 mg/day) in patients in whom at least two lines of chemotherapy had failed. The results were favourable, with a median survival of 6 months and a symptomatic improvement in some patients, but they are undermined by the absence of a placebo group and by major protocol violations. (4) Two double-blind trials, each in more than 1000 patients, showed that gefitinib does not increase the efficacy of first-line platinum combinations. (5) About 15% of patients receiving gefitinib monotherapy in clinical trials stopped taking the treatment because of adverse events. The most frequent were gastrointestinal (diarrhea, nausea, vomiting) and cutaneous (rash, acne, dry skin, pruritus). (6) Interstitial pneumonitis occurred in about 1% of patients, and was fatal in about one-third of cases. (7) Gefitinib is metabolised by the cytochrome P450 isoenzyme CYP3A4, so carries a potentially high risk of interactions. (8) In practice, more thorough assessment of gefitinib is needed to determine whether this new drug is beneficial for patients with non small-cell lung cancer. Marketing authorisation is not currently justified.
...
PMID:Gefitinib: new preparation. Non small-cell lung cancer: stricter assessment needed. 1549 96