Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We demonstrated in an earlier trial that paclitaxel (Taxol; Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Princeton, NJ) has substantial antineoplastic activity, with acceptable toxicity, in patients with advanced metastatic esophageal cancer. Preclinical and clinical data from studies in other tumors indicate substantial additive or even synergistic activity for paclitaxel/cisplatin combination chemotherapy. We encountered substantial toxicity with a cisplatin/paclitaxel/5-fluorouracil combination. To maximize paclitaxel dose, we initiated a phase II trial using cisplatin and paclitaxel alone. This report summarizes preliminary data from that trial. Paclitaxel 200 mg/m2 is given as a continuous, 24-hour infusion on day 1. On day 2, cisplatin 75 mg/m2 is given. Courses are repeated every 21 days. Dose adjustments are based on myelosuppression, neurotoxicity, and (for cisplatin) renal or auditory toxicity. All patients receive recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor to minimize the risk of neutropenic fever. The primary end point of the study is tumor regression. Secondary end points include duration of response and toxicity. Two groups of patients are being studied. Those with advanced metastatic disease receive chemotherapy alone as palliative treatment. The second group has locoregional disease that is potentially resectable. These patients receive combined-modality therapy involving induction paclitaxel/cisplatin chemotherapy followed by surgery. To date, 37 evaluable patients have been treated. Twenty had advanced metastatic disease and 17 were treated before planned surgery. Twenty-seven patients had adenocarcinoma and 10 had epidermoid carcinoma. Major objective responses were seen in 49% of all patients, with similar response rates for patients with metastatic and locoregional disease. The median duration of response for patients with metastases is 4+ months. Among 14 patients treated before surgery, one experienced a complete pathologic response, and the neoplasms of 43% were downstaged. Primary toxicity was neutropenia, which was tolerable. Surgical morbidity or mortality did not increase. Cisplatin plus paclitaxel is an active combination in the treatment of patients with advanced or locoregional esophageal cancer. Further studies with this combination both in metastatic and locally advanced disease are indicated.
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PMID:A phase II trial of paclitaxel and cisplatin in patients with locally advanced metastatic esophageal cancer: a preliminary report. 942 72

To determine the maximally tolerated dose of paclitaxel with and without filgrastim (G-CSF) when administered as a 24-hour intravenous infusion after a 120-hour infusion of gallium nitrate at a fixed dose of 300 mg/m2/24 hours, 40 patients were entered onto a trial lasting from September 1994 to September 1996. Eligibility included a diagnosis of an advanced malignancy not amenable to curative therapy and up to one previous chemotherapy regimen for metastatic disease. Gallium was administered at a fixed dose of 300 mg/m2/day as a continuous intravenous infusion for 120 hours. Paclitaxel starting at 90 mg/m2 was given concurrently with the last 24 hours of the gallium as a 24-hour intravenous infusion. Cycles were repeated every 21 days. Once the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of paclitaxel was reached, G-CSF (5 microg/kg/day days 7-16) was added and paclitaxel dose escalation continued. The MTD for paclitaxel without G-CSF was 110 mg/m2 and 225 mg/m2 with G-CSF, with neutropenia being the dose-limiting toxicity. A partial response was noted in a patient who had thymoma and a complete response was achieved in a patient who had colon cancer. The recommended phase II dosage is gallium nitrate at 300 mg/m2/day over 120 hours, with paclitaxel at 110 mg/m2 over 24 hours without G-CSF or 225 mg/m2 over 24 hours with G-CSF and 0.5 mg calcitriol on days 1 through 7. Further trials of this modified regimen for outpatient administration are in progress.
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PMID:Paclitaxel plus gallium nitrate and filgrastim in patients with refractory malignancies: a phase I trial. 953 8

Patients with high-risk breast cancer may benefit from dose-escalated chemotherapy. We studied toxicity and therapeutic efficacy of sequential high-dose therapy consisting of two cycles of ifosfamide 12,000 mg/m2, carboplatin 900 mg/m2, and epirubicin 180 mg/m2 (ICE) with peripheral blood stem cell support. Ninety-one patients with advanced breast cancer were included. Fifty-one patients with stage II/III disease and 10 or more tumor-positive axillary lymph nodes received high-dose therapy as adjuvant treatment; the remaining 40 patients were treated for metastatic disease. Peripheral blood stem cells were collected following granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-supported induction chemotherapy. In 68 patients, induction chemotherapy included two cycles of ifosfamide 7,500 mg/m2 and epirubicin 120 mg/m2, while 23 patients received one cycle of paclitaxel (Taxol; Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Princeton, NJ) 135 mg/m2, ifosfamide 6,000 mg/m2, and epirubicin 90 mg/m2. One hundred ninety-two cycles of ICE were supported with a median of 3.5 x 10(6) CD34+ cells/kg body weight (range, 1.7 to 38 x 10(6) CD34+ cells/kg body weight), which resulted in rapid hematologic reconstitution with recovery times, for a median neutrophil count of 0.5 x 10(9)/L of 13 days (range, 6 to 20 days) and for a median platelet count greater than 20 x 10(9)L of 9 days (range, 5 to 24 days). Seven patients received only one cycle of ICE because of progressive disease (in two patients with metastatic disease), central nervous system toxicity (one patient), cardiac toxicity (one patient), severe enterocolitis (one patient), development of human leukocyte antigen antibodies (one patient), and wish to withdraw from the study (one patient). Seventeen patients with metastatic disease received an additional high-dose cycle consisting of the non-cross-resistant agents thiotepa 600 mg/m2, etoposide 1,500 mg/m2, and paclitaxel 165 mg/m2. In patients treated adjuvantly, the probability of disease-free survival was 64% at 47 months, which compares favorably with results of conventional treatment protocols, with a 47% event-free probability at the same time period. The probability of progression-free survival in patients with metastatic disease was 18% at 44 months. In conclusion, sequential high-dose therapy with peripheral blood stem cell support in patients with high-risk breast cancer can be administered safely and offers a potential benefit in the adjuvant setting.
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PMID:Efficacy and toxicity of sequential high-dose therapy with peripheral blood stem cell support in patients with high-risk breast cancer. 957 56

With the use of a cisplatin-based chemotherapy, metastatic testicular cancer has become a model for a highly curable malignant disease. Current data show that 70% to 80% of patients with this disease will achieve long-term survival following cisplatin/etoposide/bleomycin therapy. The role of high-dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell support is being investigated in metastatic germ cell cancer in attempts to improve outcome for patients whose disease relapses after standard-dose chemotherapy and for those who present initially with advanced metastatic disease. Prognostic categories for patients receiving high-dose salvage chemotherapy have recently been developed: cisplatin-refractory disease, beta-human chorionic gonadotropin values greater than 1,000 U/L, and primary mediastinal germ cell tumors are factors characterizing patients who will derive less benefit from high-dose chemotherapy than those with chemosensitive disease at relapse. While standard-dose salvage chemotherapy achieves only a 20% long-term survival rate, high-dose salvage chemotherapy may yield a cure rate of approximately 40%. A randomized study comparing high-dose therapy with conventional-dose therapy (IT94 coordinated by the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation) in patients with relapsed disease is ongoing to substantiate this observation. The use of dose-intensive therapy as first-line treatment is currently being studied by several institutions. High-dose therapy may be better tolerated when used first line compared with its use in the salvage situation, and may also achieve a rapid initial cell kill before cytostatic drug resistance develops. The German Testicular Cancer Study Group has developed a sequential high-dose combination regimen of cisplatin/etoposide/ifosfamide given with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor and peripheral blood stem cell support for four cycles every 3 weeks. This ongoing study, started in 1990, had accrued 218 patients with advanced testicular germ cell tumors as of June 1997. Of 141 evaluable patients receiving dose levels 1 through 5, 82 (58%) have achieved complete remission with no evidence of disease and 32 (23%) have achieved partial remission with marker normalization. The early death rate was 8%. Overall and event-free survival rates at 2 years are 78% and 73%, respectively, with a projected 5-year overall survival rate of 74%. Despite favorable preliminary results, this approach cannot be considered standard treatment. Currently, high-dose chemotherapy with peripheral blood stem cell transplantation should be administered to patients with testicular cancer only within controlled clinical trials to allow long-term cure rates and treatment-related late side effects to be evaluated.
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PMID:The use of dose-intensified chemotherapy in the treatment of metastatic nonseminomatous testicular germ cell tumors. German Testicular Cancer Study Group. 957 59

The authors evaluated the novel chemotherapeutic regimen of paclitaxel (Taxol, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Princeton, NJ, U.S.A.) plus doxorubicin plus filgrastim--a granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)--in advanced or metastatic sarcoma. Eligible patients must have had histologically confirmed advanced previously untreated soft-tissue sarcoma. All patients must have had bidimensionally measurable metastases. Treatment consisted of doxorubicin, 50 mg/m2 by intravenous push, followed 4 hours later by paclitaxel, 150 mg/m2 by continuous infusion over 24 hours every 3 weeks, plus G-CSF, 5 microg/kg, on days 3 through 12 of each cycle. Cycles were repeated every 21 days. A one-time dose escalation for doxorubicin only (60 mg/m2) was allowed in all patients who experienced no significant toxicity after their first cycle of paclitaxel plus doxorubicin. From November 1993 through May 1996, 29 patients were entered in this study. Grade 3 anemia occurred in three patients. Grade 3--4 neutropenia occurred in 20 patients. Seven patients experienced at least one episode of neutropenic fever, including one death. Grade 3 thrombocytopenia occurred in four patients. There were six partial responses in 27 eligible patients, for a response rate of 22.2% (95% confidence interval, 7%-38%). Median time to progression was 4.5 months, and median overall survival was 10.2 months. The regimen of paclitaxel plus doxorubicin plus filgrastim as used in this study appears to have no more activity than single-agent doxorubicin.
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PMID:Paclitaxel (Taxol) plus doxorubicin plus filgrastim in advanced sarcoma: a phase II study. 962 89

The authors evaluate the efficacy and feasibility of dose-intensive doxorubicin and ifosfamide combination chemotherapy in patients with sarcomas. From January 1995 to April 1996, 33 evaluable patients with either metastatic sarcoma or primary sarcomas with a high-risk for metastases (all except one was previously untreated with chemotherapy) were treated on two consecutive protocols. The median age was 45 years (range, 15-68 years). The first protocol included doxorubicin at 75 mg/m2 given as a 72-hour infusion on days 1 to 3 along with ifosfamide at 2 g/m2/d over 2 hours x 5, days 1 to 5 (protocol AI 75/10). Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) was used only if indicated according to American Society of Clinical Oncology guidelines. The second protocol included doxorubicin at 90 mg/m2 as a 72-hour continuous infusion and ifosfamide at 2.5 g/m2/d for 4 days (protocol AI 90/10) with prophylactic G-CSF. A median of four cycles were administered (range, 1-6). Three patients achieved a pathologic complete response (CR) and 18 patients achieved a partial response (PR) for a response rate (RR) of 64% (95% confidence interval (CI), 45-80%). Response rate for the subset of patients with soft-tissue sarcomas was 66% (95% CI, 46-82%). Only three patients progressed on therapy. Febrile neutropenia was noted in 31% of cycles at AI 75/10 and in 56% of cycles at AI 90/10. One patient developed reversible grade 3 central nervous system (CNS) toxicity. There was one treatment-related death on AI 90/10 secondary to doxorubicin cardiac toxicity at a cumulative dose of 435 mg/m2. Dose-intensive doxorubicin plus ifosfamide is feasible in appropriately selected patients and appears to be a very active regimen in patients with sarcomas. The authors are currently testing this regimen with G-CSF and thrombopoietin.
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PMID:Results of two consecutive trials of dose-intensive chemotherapy with doxorubicin and ifosfamide in patients with sarcomas. 962 8

A multistep HDC regimen was designed as first-line chemotherapy for MBC. Twenty-four patients with MBC and no previous chemotherapy for metastatic disease were treated with high-dose cyclophosphamide (5000 mg/m2), and etoposide (1000 mg/m2) (CyVP16), followed by granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF). Peripheral blood stem cells (PBSCs) were collected. Subsequently patients received cyclophosphamide (6000 mg/m2), thiotepa (500 mg/m2) and carboplatin (800 mg/m2) (CTCb) with hematopoietic rescue. Upon recovery from hematopoietic and gastrointestinal toxicity three cycles of doxorubicin (50 mg/m2) and taxol (150 mg/m2) were delivered. After CyVP16 42% of patients developed neutropenic fevers. There was one documented episode of bacteremia. Patients received CTCb 32 days after starting CyVP16. After CTCb the median number of days to ANC >5 x 10(9)/l was 10 and to a platelet count >20 x 10(9)/l was 14. Neutropenic fevers developed in 16 patients. There were no hemorrhagic episodes. A total of 69 cycles of doxorubicin and taxol were delivered (87% of planned). The median time from PBSC infusion to the first cycle was 38 days. The median time to the second cycle was 27 days and to the last cycle was 24 days. One patient developed congestive heart failure. Two episodes of neutropenic fevers were observed. No toxicity-related deaths were observed. Grafts are stable at 6 months post transplantation. This multistep regimen is feasible with acceptable toxicity.
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PMID:High-dose chemotherapy and autologous stem cell support followed by post-transplant doxorubicin and taxol as initial therapy for metastatic breast cancer: hematopoietic tolerance and efficacy. 967 53

A phase II trial was performed to investigate the efficacy and tolerance of vinorelbine (VNB), 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), l-leucovorin (LLV) and recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) in advanced breast cancer. Between August 1994 and October 1996, 53 patients entered this trial. Thirty-seven patients were previously untreated and 16 patients had failed previous palliative chemotherapy with (n = 12) or without anthracyclines (n = 4). Therapy consisted of VNB 40 mg m(-2) diluted in 250 ml of saline infused over 30 min on days 1 and 14 and LLV 100 mg m(-2) administered by intravenous bolus injection and 5-FU 400 mg m(-2) diluted in 500 ml of saline infused over 2 h, both given on days 1-5 every 4 weeks. G-CSF was administered at 5 microg kg(-1) day(-1) subcutaneously on days 6-10 during each cycle. Treatment was continued in cases of response or stable disease until a total of six courses were completed. The overall response rate was 59% for chemotherapeutically naive patients (95% confidence interval 42-75%), including five complete responses (CR; 13%) and 17 partial responses (PR; 46%); ten patients (27%) had stable disease (SD) and only five (14%) progressed (PD). Second-line chemotherapy with this regimen resulted in 3/16 (19%) objective remissions, but nine patients had SD and four had PD. The median time to progression was 10.5 months (range 2-23) in previously untreated patients and 7.0 months (range 2-19) in those who had failed prior chemotherapy. After a median follow-up time of 14 months, 29 patients (55%) are still alive with metastatic disease; median survival has not been reached yet. The dose-limiting toxicity was myelosuppression: WHO grade III and IV neutropenia occurred in 15 (28%) and four patients (8%), and was complicated by septicaemia in two; grade III anaemia and thrombocytopenia were noted in four (8%) and three (6%) patients respectively. Severe (WHO grade 3) non-haematological toxicities included stomatitis in 6% and nausea/vomiting and alopecia in 2% each. Our data suggest that the combination of vinorelbine, 5-fluorouracil and l-leucovorin plus G-CSF is an effective first line regimen for treatment of advanced breast cancer. Overall toxicity was modest, with myelosuppression being the dose-limiting side-effect. Other severe adverse reactions were uncommon.
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PMID:Effective treatment of advanced breast cancer with vinorelbine, 5-fluorouracil and l-leucovorin plus human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor. 974 9

High-dose chemotherapy is associated with a high complete response rate and possibly some survival advantage in patients with metastatic breast cancer. We designed a clinical trial consisting of a two-step high-dose chemotherapy regimen followed by posttransplantation doxorubicin as the first chemotherapy treatment for metastatic disease. Twenty-one patients with metastatic breast cancer and no previous chemotherapy for metastatic disease were treated with high-dose cyclophosphamide (Cy; 5000 mg/m2), followed by granulocyte colony-stimulating factor. Peripheral blood stem cells were collected. Subsequently, patients received Cy (6000 mg/m2), thiotepa (500 mg/m2), and carboplatin (800 mg/m2) (CTCb) with hematopoietic rescue. Upon recovery of hematopoietic and gastrointestinal toxicity, three cycles of doxorubicin (Dox; 60 mg/m2) were delivered. After Cy, nine patients (45%) developed neutropenic fevers. There were no episodes of bacteremia. Patients received CTCb 37 days after starting Cy and had a hospital stay of 19 days. After CTCb, the median number of days to an absolute neutrophil count >5 x 10(9)/liter was 8, and the median number of days to a platelet count >20 x 10(9)/liter was 9. Neutropenic fevers occurred in 12 patients. There were no hemorrhagic complications. Fifty-five of the 63 planned courses of Dox were delivered. The median time from peripheral blood stem cell infusion to the first Dox cycle was 38 days. The median time to the second Dox cycle was 28 days, and to the last cycle was 30 days. Three episodes of neutropenic fevers were observed. Two patients developed herpes zoster. This regimen is feasible, with acceptable toxicity.
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PMID:High-dose chemotherapy and autologous stem cell support followed by posttransplantation doxorubicin as initial therapy for metastatic breast cancer. 981 72

Secondary infections related to neutropenia and functional defects of phagocytes are common consequences in patients treated for cancer. The hematopoietic colony-stimulating factors (CSF) have been introduced into clinical practice as additional supportive measures that can reduce the incidence of infectious complications in patients with cancer and neutropenia. The aim of this study was to determine the role of granuolcyte/macrophage(GM)-CSF and granulocyte(G)-CSF in enhancing in vivo human neutrophil function. A luminol-dependent chemiluminescence assay was developed to evaluate whether the repair in neutropenia accompanies the ability of neutrophils to function. A dose of 5 microg G-CSF kg(-1) day(-1) [recombinant human (rHu) G-CSF; filgrastim] or 250 microg GM-CSF m(-2) day(-1) (rHu GM-CSF; molgramostim) was administered subcutaneously once daily to 12 metastatic cancer patients being treated with different cytotoxic regimens. All injections of CSF were given after the initiation of neutropenia and continued until the occurrence of an absolute neutrophil recovery. rHu GM-CSF and rHu G-CSF, administered once daily at the 250 microg m(-2) day(-1) and 5 microg kg(-1) day(-1) level, were effective in increasing the absolute neutrophil count and neutrophil function, as measured by an automated chemiluminescence system.
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PMID:The effect of recombinant human granulocyte/macrophage-colony-stimulating factor (rHu GM-CSF) and rHu G-CSF administration on neutrophil chemiluminescence assay in patients following cyclic chemotherapy. 982 43


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