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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ondansetron, a
5HT3
antagonist, was given to 20 children aged 4 to 18 years who were undergoing treatment with the Australian and New Zealand Childhood Cancer Study Group Acute Lymphocytic Leukaemia (ALL) Study V Protocol. The study was open, dose ranging, and noncomparative, and designed to evaluate safety and efficacy of ondansetron in preventing nausea and vomiting caused by cyclophosphamide intravenous (IV) 1,000 mg/m2 day 1, and cytarabine IV subcutaneously (SC) 75 mg/m2 on days 2 to 5. Ten patients were given ondansetron 5 mg/m2 IV (group A) and subsequently another 10 patients were given ondansetron 3 mg/m2 IV (group B). Oral ondansetron was given for 14 doses, at the same dosage for both groups, commencing simultaneously with the IV infusion and continuing at 8 hourly intervals, ie, until day 5. The oral dose was based on surface area with the following schedule: 0.3 to 0.6 m2, 2 mg; 0.6 to 1 m2, 3 mg; and greater than 1 m2, 4 mg. Vomiting on the first day of chemotherapy was reported in group A by one patient and by one patient in group B. Vomiting during days 2 to 5 was reported by two group-A patients and by three group-B patients.
Nausea
was recorded on day 1 by one patient in group A, and two in group B, and on days 2 to 5 by three patients in group A, and by seven in group B. All patients were alert during treatment with ondansetron and there was no dystonia. There were no changes in renal function or hematology values that could be ascribed to the study drug. Transient elevations in bilirubin and liver enzymes were observed. We conclude that our results indicate that ondansetron is a safe and extremely effective single-agent antiemetic with minimal side effects, when administered both IV and orally.
...
PMID:Prevention of cyclophosphamide/cytarabine-induced emesis with ondansetron in children with leukemia. 214 19
Sixty five chemotherapy naive patients receiving cisplatin (50-120 mg/m2) containing chemotherapy participated in an evaluation of ondansetron, a
5-HT3 receptor
antagonist, in the prophylaxis of acute and delayed
nausea
and emesis. Ondansetron was given as three 0.15 mg/kg doses intravenously (0.5 h before, 3.5 h and 7.5 h after cisplatin) for acute emesis followed by 8 mg orally 8-hourly for five days at 24 h post-cisplatin for delayed emesis. For acute emesis (first 24 h, n = 63), complete control was achieved in 34 patients (54%) and major control (1-2 episodes) in 16 patients (25%). Complete protection from acute
nausea
was achieved in 48 patients (76%). For delayed emesis (days 2-6, n = 55), 33 patients (60%) were completely protected or reported one to two episodes during the entire 5-day observation period; 63% reported only mild or no
nausea
. Ondansetron was well tolerated with no significant drug-related adverse events. These results are consistent with serotonin being a significant transmitter of cisplatin-induced emesis.
...
PMID:Ondansetron (GR38032) in the prophylaxis of acute and delayed cisplatin-induced emesis. 214 9
The
nausea
and emesis associated with chemotherapy still constitute an important problem in anticancer treatment. The new specific
5-HT3 receptor
antagonists appear to be effective against vomiting induced by chemotherapy and radiation. An overview is given of the current theories on the physiology of emesis and the available literature on ondansetron (GR38032F) as an antiemetic.
...
PMID:Ondansetron, a new antiemetic therapy for oncology. An overview. 214 83
Emesis in chemotherapy containing Cisplatinum (DDP) is still a therapeutical dilemma. Emesis and
nausea
cause the cessation of a potential curative therapy in up to 10% of patients treated with DDP. We studied the antiemetic effectiveness of the selective Serotonin (
5HT3
)-receptor-antagonist Ondansetron (GR 38032F, Glaxo) in patients receiving high dose platinum chemotherapy. All patients suffered from severe emesis and were refractory to any standard antiemetic regimen (Metoclopramid). We studied the efficacy of the new drug against acute and delayed emesis following platinum chemotherapy. All adverse events are listed. Thirty four courses (n = 17 patients) of a platinum-containing regimen were analyzed so far. A sufficient antiemetic efficacy was observed in 56% of the courses. In 32 of 34 course (94%) the patients preferred the new drug compared with the standard antiemetic regime (Metoclopramid). In most cases only minor adverse events--which do not require any medical therapy--occurred. The most common adverse events were headache, constipation, dry mouth, abdominal discomfort and elevation of liver enzyme level without any clinical symptoms. One patient needed bowel surgery for severe constipation based on widespread intra-abdominal carcinosis.
...
PMID:[Refractory vomiting with cisplatin therapy. Prospective study with the serotonin receptor antagonist GR 38032F]. 215 May 51
Three major areas of medicine are identified in which there is a need for new antiemetic drugs. These are the nausea and vomiting arising from gastrointestinal motility disturbances (functional dyspepsia, diabetic neuropathy, classical migraine), the sickness evoked by abnormal motion, and the severe emesis experienced by cancer patients as a result of certain cytotoxic therapies. For gastrointestinal-related
nausea
, selective stimulants of gut motility are suggested to form the basis for a new type of antiemetic therapy. In motion sickness, there has been progress in the understanding of the illness, but little advance in the development of new drugs that selectively prevent this type of sickness. In cancer chemo- and radio-therapy, the discovery that selective 5-HT3 (5-HT, 5-hydroxytryptamine) receptor antagonists can prevent severe cytotoxic-evoked emesis now promises to radically change the type of antiemetic therapy given to these patients. This type of antiemetic compound and the pharmacology of the new
5-HT3 receptor
antagonists are, therefore, discussed in detail.
...
PMID:New antiemetic drugs. 217 55
The results of an open study designed to evaluate the prevention of cisplatin-induced emesis by the specific
5-HT3 receptor
antagonist ICS 205-930 are reported. Fifty-four cancer patients, treated with diverse chemotherapy regimens, all including cisplatin (greater than = 50 mg/m2), received ICS 205-930 for a total of 165 courses. ICS 205-930 (10 mg) was given i.v. immediately before the cisplatin infusion and a second 10-mg dose was given immediately after. In 109 courses (66%) the patients did not have any vomiting episodes.
Nausea
was absent in 44.8% of courses. More than 3 vomiting episodes occurred only in 17 (10.4%) courses, and severe
nausea
only in 11 (6.6%). ICS 205-930 was extremely well tolerated. Mild headache occurred during 7 courses (4.2%) in 4 patients, hypotension during 5 courses (3%) in 3 patients and lipothymia in 2 courses (1.2%) in 2 patients. These results suggest that ICS 205-930 is an effective and well tolerated antiemetic drug in patients receiving cisplatin chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Prevention of nausea and vomiting in cisplatin-treated patients by a selective 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT3) receptor antagonist, ICS 205-930. 228 99
1. The 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT3) receptor antagonist, GR 38032F, which possesses potent anti-emetic properties in vomiting induced by cancer chemotherapeutic drugs, has been tested to determine its value in the prophylaxis of motion sickness induced by cross-coupled stimulation. The double-blind trial compared GR 38032F with both a placebo (lactose) and with hyoscine. In addition, studies of ocular pursuit and saccadic eye movements were carried out following the administration of each drug. 2. The prophylactic effect of GR 38032F on motion-induced
nausea
was indistinguishable from that of placebo, whereas following hyoscine subjects showed a highly significant (P less than 0.001) increase in tolerance to cross-coupled stimulation. Tests of oculomotor function showed no effect on saccadic eye movement from either drug. However, both drugs produced a significant (P less than 0.05) though small reduction in eye velocity gain during pursuit eye movement. 3. These findings suggest that the
5-HT3 receptor
is not involved in the neural pathways that bring about motion sickness, but that it may have a role in the control of ocular pursuit. The absence of an anti-motion sickness effect from a drug that is effective in the treatment of vomiting induced by cancer chemotherapy serves to emphasize that different neural mechanisms are involved in the generation of motion sickness.
...
PMID:The effect on motion sickness and oculomotor function of GR 38032F, a 5-HT3-receptor antagonist with anti-emetic properties. 252 20
A total of 28 patients receiving cancer chemotherapy with cisplatin-containing regimens (70-120 mg/m2) participated in an evaluation of the efficacy and safety of GR38032F for the prevention of acute nausea and vomiting. GR38032F, a
5HT3
receptor antagonist, was given 30 min prior to cisplatin as an 8-mg loading dose by i.v. infusion over 15 min, followed by continuous infusion at a rate of 1 mg/h for 24 h. Efficacy was assessed by measurement of the number of episodes of retching and vomiting occurring in the 24 h after cisplatin administration and by an assessment of
nausea
during the same period. In all, 26 patients were evaluable for efficacy: overall, complete control was achieved in 12 patients (46%), major control (1-2 emetic episodes), in 6 (23%); minor control (3-5 episodes), in 1 (4%); control could not be achieved (failure; greater than 5 episodes) in 7 patients (27%). GR3832F was the tolerated, with no significant drug-related adverse events. These encouraging results should be confirmed in comparative trials.
...
PMID:GR38032F, a 5HT3 receptor antagonist, in the prophylaxis of acute cisplatin-induced nausea and vomiting. 252 62
GR38032F is a specific 5-HT3 (serotonin) receptor antagonist with antiemetic activity in animal and early human studies. We performed a dose-ranging phase I study of GR38032F in 43 evaluable patients receiving cisplatin 60 120 mg/m2 for the first time (38 of these patients were chemotherapy-naive). Intravenous GR38032F was administered over a dose range from 0.01 to 0.48 mg/kg given three times at four-hour intervals beginning one half hour before cisplatin, and patients were observed for 24 hours. An additional five patients were treated with 0.18 mg/kg given three times at six-hour intervals. Excellent antiemetic efficacy was noted, with 44% of patients experiencing no vomiting and 26% no
nausea
. Major protection from vomiting (less than or equal to 2 episodes) and from
nausea
(less than or equal to 2 hours) was experienced by 81% and 44%, respectively. Mild to moderate headache (40%), lightheadedness (21%), and elevated transaminase (19%) were the most common adverse events reported. One patient experienced an apparent hypersensitivity reaction that responded to conventional medications. No extrapyramidal reactions or akathisia were seen. GR38032F was effective through most of the dose range. However, efficacy decreased at the 0.01 mg/kg level and number and intensity of adverse events increased at the 0.48 mg/kg level. Analysis of those patients receiving high-dose cisplatin (100 to 120 mg/m2) revealed a positive association of GR38032F dose and antiemetic activity (Fisher's exact test, two-sided; P less than .05). The
5-HT3 receptor
antagonists may provide antiemetic efficacy similar to high-dose metoclopramide without antidopaminergic toxicity. The maximum recommended dose on this schedule of GR38032F is 0.36 mg/kg.
...
PMID:Dose ranging phase I study of the serotonin antagonist GR38032F for prevention of cisplatin-induced nausea and vomiting. 252 64
Ondansetron is a
5-HT3 receptor
antagonist which has shown activity in the prevention of nausea and vomiting resulting from cytotoxic therapy. This paper describes the results of studies evaluating the efficacy of oral ondansetron in controlling radiation-induced emesis. Initial non-randomised studies showed that doses of 4 mg q.d.s. or 8 mg t.d.s. of ondansetron achieved complete or major control of vomiting in 77-91% of patients and mild or absence of
nausea
in 72-77% following single exposure high-dose (8-10 Gy) radiotherapy to the upper abdomen. A subsequent double-blind, prospective, randomised trial compared ondansetron 8 mg t.d.s. with metoclopramide 10 mg t.d.s. in the prevention of emesis following single radiation doses of 8-10 Gy to the upper abdomen. On the day of radiotherapy, ondansetron achieved significantly greater control of vomiting and retching (P less than 0.001) and
nausea
(P = 0.001) than metoclopramide. An advantage for ondansetron was also seen on days 2 and 3 after irradiation, although this did not reach a statistically significant level. Only two patients, out of 154, in all the studies experienced side effects attributable to ondansetron: one developed headache and the other experienced headache and vertigo. These studies show that ondansetron is a safe drug, with activity in the prevention of radiation-induced emesis and significantly greater efficacy than metoclopramide in the control of nausea and vomiting following single exposure upper abdominal high-dose radiotherapy.
...
PMID:Clinical studies with ondansetron in the control of radiation-induced emesis. 253 96
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