Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027947 (neutropenia)
17,527 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to improve survival in a disease where the majority of deaths occur from metastases, the integration of systemic chemotherapy is crucial. Research efforts must continue to focus on refining case selection criteria, improving complete response proportions, and overcoming drug resistance. The blanket recommendation of a single therapeutic strategy such as radical surgery, chemotherapy, or radiation therapy to all patients is quickly becoming an outdated approach. Refinements in the understanding of the clinical, pathologic, and molecular features of urothelial tumors will ultimately improve case selection. Evaluation of NM23 RNA levels, or DNA ploidy and T138 surface antigen expression, which have been shown to correlate with metastatic potential, may hold important therapeutic implications. The use of hematopoietic growth factors has the potential to improve both the tolerance of chemotherapy and complete response proportions, a prerequisite for cure. A recent report from Japan of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor with MVAC and other chemotherapy regimens for urothelial tumors corroborated an initial report in reducing the duration of neutropenia. However, the dose response curves for most of the known active agents are not well defined and, ultimately, new agents and strategies will be required. Gallium nitrate, when administered by continuous intravenous infusion, has significant single agent activity in cisplatin-refractory patients with 9/31 responses (29%), including 6 CRs (19%) and further studies are warranted. Drug resistance remains a major obstacle, and as the mechanisms are unravelled, more rational therapies can be designed. For example, resistance to Adriamycin (doxorubicin; Adria Laboratories, Columbus, OH) and vinblastine, two components in the MVAC regimen, are mediated in part by the MDR1 gene. Attempts are ongoing to identify prospectively those tumors with high levels of expression that may be more amenable to treatment with drugs that are not affected by this mechanism. The neoadjuvant approach allows an in vivo assessment of response to chemotherapy as well as the potential for bladder preservation. In most cases additional therapy directed at the primary is required as clinical understaging is a significant problem and pCR proportions are less than 30%. For some patients, initial surgery followed by treatment based on pathologic criteria may represent a better strategy. In these cases the recommendation for adjuvant treatment potentially limits therapy to a population of patients for whom therapy is essential. Based on available data, this would include patients with positive lymph nodes at the time of surgery. Ideally, patients with invasive bladder cancer should be entered into clinical trials designed to assess the impact of these strategies on survival.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The evolving role of chemotherapy for muscle infiltrating bladder cancer. 177 75

Of 19 patients with advanced transitional bladder cancer (T2-T4, N0-N+, M0) who received two or three cycles of pre-emptive MVC (Methotrexate, Vinblastine, Cisplatin), pathological partial (PR) and complete (CR) remissions were observed in 67% (50% and 17% respectively). The toxicity of chemotherapy was generally acceptable but 5 patients required hospitalization for neutropenia and thrombopenia . In one of them chemotherapy was stopped for severe sepsis. No death was observed. In 11 patients follow-up is greater than 12 months. In this group, 10 patients are actually alive and disease-free, while the other one was dead owing to brain metastasis, after eight months from surgery.
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PMID:[Neoadjuvant chemotherapy with MVC (methotrexate, vinblastine, cisplatin)in the treatment of infiltrating transitional carcinoma of the bladder]. 214 7

To investigate possible immune mechanisms responsible for levamisole-associated neutropenia we tested patients with bladder cancer on levamisole therapy. Autoimmune and complement-dependent granulocytotoxic antibodies were detected in 3 patients with levamisole-induced neutropenia. The granulocytopenia appeared to be causally related to the presence of autoantibodies in that pretreatment serum or serum obtained after the restoration of neutrophil counts showed diminished or no granulocytotoxic reactivity. In addition, granulocytotoxins were found in 6 out of 20 (30%) patients receiving levamisole compared to only 2 out of 28 (7.1%) patients on no levamisole or placebo (P less than 0.06). Hence, screening for granulocytotoxins may forewarn of neutropenia in patients receiving levamisole for a variety of clinical diseases.
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PMID:Levamisole-associated neutropenia and autoimmune granulocytotoxins. 737 61

Recent results demonstrate an emerging role for paclitaxel in patients with urothelial-tract cancer and in patients with testicular cancer. Yielding response rates in the range of 40-50% as a single agent, paclitaxel is one of the most active drugs in metastatic bladder cancer. Ongoing trials of paclitaxel combination chemotherapy with cisplatin or cisplatin and ifosfamide demonstrate substantial objective remission rates above 70% and, in addition, a high range of complete responses. Thus, paclitaxel appears to be an important drug when used as part of first-line combination chemotherapy for metastatic bladder cancer. Ongoing clinical trials focus on the combination of paclitaxel with cisplatin, ifosfamide, gemcytabine, and carboplatin. Furthermore, paclitaxel administration has been demonstrated to be easily applicable to patients with reduced renal function, requiring no dose reduction and producing no increase in toxicity. Future strategies will have to compare the most active paclitaxel combination regimen with first-line MVAC (methotrexate, vinblastine, adriamycin, cisplatin) chemotherapy. Finally, the role of paclitaxel combination regimens needs to be explored in the adjuvant and neoadjuvant setting in patients with bladder cancer. In testicular cancer, paclitaxel has initially been tested in patients with cisplatin-refractory disease. Among 4 consecutive trials involving a total of 83 patients a response rate of 26% has been observed using dose schedules varying from 3-h to 24-h infusions and doses ranging from 175 to 250 mg/m2. The major toxicities of paclitaxel include neutropenia, neurotoxicity, and fatigue syndrome. Currently, combinations of paclitaxel with cisplatin +/- ifosfamide are used as first- or second-line salvage therapy in patients with relapsed metastatic testicular cancer. The German Testicular Cancer Study Group uses a paclitaxel (Taxol, ifosfamide, cisplatin; TIP) combination regimen as salvage treatment. Following the TIP regimen and the application of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) are harvested and the patients subsequently receive high-dose chemotherapy with PBSC rescue. Since only a few drugs have demonstrated substantial activity in cisplatin-refractory disease, paclitaxel will be used in early salvage strategies and, possibly, as first-line chemotherapy as a part of platinum-based combination regimens in patients with testicular cancer. Further trials confirming the important role of paclitaxel in this highly curable malignancy and a thorough investigation of its acute and long-term toxicity will be the future tasks.
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PMID:The role of paclitaxel in chemosensitive urological malignancies: current strategies in bladder cancer and testicular germ-cell tumors. 898 35

Early Phase II clinical studies with bropirimine (U-54461S) having interferon (IFN) inducing and direct antiproliferative activities were conducted in patients with various solid tumors or hematologic neoplasm at 34 institutions nationwide. To investigate the safety and efficacy of the treatment, bropirimine was orally administered to the patients at the dose of 1g every two hours, three times a day for three consecutive days with a four day drug-free interval. Among the 65 patients registered, 60 patients were eligible and 44 patients completed bropirimine treatment in accordance with the respective protocols. Complete response (CR) was observed in 7 cases, and partial response (PR) was observed in 4 cases, so the efficacy rate was 25.0% (7 CRs + 4 PRs/44). Classified by target tumors, the efficacy rates were 12.9% (6 CRs/14) in bladder CIS, 33.3% 1 CR/3) in superficial bladder cancer. 11.1% 1 PR/9) in renal cell carcinoma, and 42.9% (3 PRs/7) in malignant lymphoma, respectively. Adverse drug reactions frequently observed were influenza-like symptoms such as fever (60.0%) and generalized malaise (21.7%), gastrointestinal symptoms like anorexia (56.7%) and nausea/vomiting (43.3%), and adverse effects on the circulatory system such as tachycardia (15.0%) and abnormalities in ECG (11.7%). Most of these symptoms were relieved or improved. Abnormalities in laboratory tests observed frequently were adverse effects on the liver such as elevations in GPT (33.3%), in GOT (31.7%), and in LDH (18.3%) or on the blood system like a decrease in RBC (18.3%), leukopenia (26.7%), or neutropenia (25.0%). In conclusion, bropirimine treatment proved to be effective for bladder CIS in particular, suggesting that it will be promising for use in the treatment of the disease.
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PMID:[Bropirimine (U-54461S) early phase II clinical studies--to investigate the efficacy and safety of bropirimine treatment on various malignant tumors (urological, hematologic, and dermal cancers)]. 902 Sep 48

Patients with regionally advanced bladder cancer not considered candidates for definitive surgical intervention underwent continuous antegrade infusion of doxorubicin by percutaneous nephrostomy tube. Doxorubicin was administered for 7 consecutive days at a rate designed to achieve target urinary concentrations (range 5-80 micrograms/ml). Urine and serum concentrations of doxorubicin were monitored daily. Toxicity was assessed by serial renal scans, antegrade nephrostograms, blood counts, and serum chemistries. Patients were restaged after three cycles of therapy. In all, 23 cycles, constituting 156 days of therapy, were administered to 10 patients. Target urinary drug levels were achieved during all cycles. Total doxorubicin dose ranged from 125 to 2,500 mg. No systemic (neutropenia or myocardial dysfunction) or regional toxicity (extravasation, sepsis, stricture) was noted. Five of 10 patients tolerated the planned three treatment cycles. Poor performance status (PS, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group: ECOG 3) strongly correlated with treatment intolerance and early death from disease. After three cycles of therapy, 2 of 5 evaluable patients had stable disease, I had radiographic partial response (PR) with a biopsy demonstrating extensive tumor necrosis, I had no identifiable tumor at the time of restaging transurethral resection of bladder tumor (TURBT), and a final patient with upper and lower tract carcinoma in situ (CIS) was cytologically staged NED. (no evidence of disease). These findings demonstrate the feasibility and low toxicity of this approach.
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PMID:Continuous infusion, intravesical doxorubicin for the treatment of regionally advanced bladder cancer: a phase I-II trial. 925 84

Concurrent intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy and radiation therapy following alteration of pelvic blood flow was performed in 15 patients with invasive bladder cancer (T2: 2, T3a: 4, T3b: 5, T4: 4). Infusion chemotherapy consisted of a daily low-dose of cisplatin with a dose range of 7 to 9 mg per patient. Of the 15 patients, 11 achieved complete response (73%) and other had partial response. Four of those with CR developed recurrence (local recurrence in three and distant metastasis in one patient). Cause specific and disease-free survival at 3-years were 56% and 49.9%, respectively, and the bladder preservation rate at 3-year was 47%. Toxic reactions related to the treatment was of a reasonable level, and cisplatin-induced renal dysfunction was not experienced, even in the patients with poor renal function, although transient neutropenia and thrombocytopenia occurred in all patients at the latter stage of the treatment. This treatment modality is considered to be effective and feasible even in patients with locally advanced disease and/or those unsuited for cisplatin-based systemic chemotherapy.
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PMID:Radiation therapy and concurrent daily intra-arterial infusion of low-dose cisplatin following alteration of pelvic blood flow for invasive bladder cancer: a preliminary report. 985 85

A phase I study was designed to evaluate the toxicity of escalating doses of gemcitabine along with fixed-dose paclitaxel in patients heavily pretreated with chemotherapy or radiotherapy. All patients had no prior therapy with the study drugs and possessed both adequate performance and end organ function. Eighteen patients were entered in the study. Characteristics included a median age of 66 years (range, 41 to 77) and stage IV disease in all patients; there were six patients with colon cancer, two with bladder cancer, three with non-small-cell lung cancer, two with esophageal cancer, three with pancreatic cancer, and two with cancer of unknown primary. Paclitaxel (150 mg/m2 over 3 hours) was given on day 1 and gemcitabine (800, 900, and 1,000 mg/m2 over 15 minutes) was given in three separate dose-escalating cohorts (1-3) on days 1 and 8. The treatment cycled every 21 days. The dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) proved to be neutropenia. All nonhematologic toxicities were mild and included gastrointestinal (nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea), dermatologic (rash), and neurologic (paresthesias) disturbances along with transient elevations of liver function tests. The combination of gemcitabine and paclitaxel seems to be well tolerated, and the recommended starting dose for a phase II study, in pretreated patients using a day 1/day 8 treatment schedule, should be 900 mg/m2 for gemcitabine (days 1 and 8) along with 150 mg/m2 for paclitaxel (day 1).
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PMID:Phase I study of paclitaxel and day 1/day 8 gemcitabine in patients with solid malignancies. 1095 61

To evaluate an alternative treatment for advanced or metastatic urothelial cancers, a dose-intensive combination chemotherapy regimen using carboplatin, methotrexate, vincristine and cisplatin was given to 60 patients over a 3-year period (1990 to 1993). There were 26 patients with locally advanced disease and 34 with metastatic disease; 49 patients were evaluable for response. A complete response was noted in four patients (8%) and a partial response in 15 (31%), for an overall response rate of 39%. The median survival was 12 months. Two- and 5-year survival rates were 25.5% (95% confidence interval CI) 15.2-37.0) and 7.3% (95% CI 2.2-16.4) respectively. Failure-free survival was 15.3% (95% CI 7.5-25.6) at 2 years and 5.9% (95% CI 1.6-14.4) at 5 years, with a median of 8 months. For the responders, the median duration of response was 14 months, with a range of 2-59+ months. Toxicity included myelosuppression (28% grade 4/5 neutropenia, 19% grade 4 thrombocytopenia), peripheral neuropathy (54% grade 1 and 23% grade 2/3) and ototoxicity (21% grade 1, 19% grade 2). This schedule of dose-intensified platinum-based chemotherapy for bladder cancer resulted in significant neurotoxicity without evidence of enhanced response rates or survival. Regimens such as methotrexate, vinblastine, doxorubicin and cisplatin should remain standard. Accelerated regimens may be useful in situations were it is necessary to administer chemotherapy over a short time (e.g. as part of combined modality treatment).
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PMID:Accelerated chemotherapy in the treatment of urothelial cancer. 1155 26

To evaluate the clinical value of the concurrent use of methotrexate administered immediately before paclitaxel, we investigated the efficacy and toxicity of this two-drug combination administered as palliative second line therapy in patients with advanced urothelial cancer. The design of the schedule and sequence used was based on our previous preclinical data from a comparative study on sequential combinations of paclitaxel and methotrexate in a human bladder cancer cell line. As a confirmation study, we further extended our analysis of in vitro synergism. Twenty patients with advanced transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary tract previously treated with platinum-based therapy, with adequate renal function and a performance status > or = 60 were considered eligible. They received therapy with methotrexate 30 mg/m2 administered as an intravenous bolus, followed immediately by paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 given as a 3-hr infusion, both on day 1 every 21 days. Therapy was given on a compassionate-use basis until either disease progression was documented or the patient became intolerant to therapy. In vitro data were further analyzed using the median-effect principle and the combination index method. Twenty patients with metastatic (16 patients) or locally advanced disease (four patients) received a median of three cycles of therapy. Of the 19 patients assessable for response, there were six partial responses and seven disease stabilizations with no complete responses. Median duration of response was 3 months (range, 2-7) and median survival was 5 months. Three patients developed grade 3-4 neutropenia, one patient had grade 3 anemia, four patients had grade 2-3 sensory neuropathy, and three patients had myalgias. Eighteen patients developed alopecia. Gastrointestinal toxicity was mild. One patient died after the first cycle due to pulmonary thrombo-embolism and could not be evaluated for response. The synergistic in vitro effect of the concurrent combination was confirmed in analyses performed under mutually exclusive and mutually nonexclusive criteria. In conclusion, the combination of methotrexate and paclitaxel at this dose and sequence is feasible and active as a palliative therapy in patients with advanced urothelial cancer previously treated with platinum-based therapies. This schedule merits further investigation in a phase-II trial.
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PMID:Feasibility trial of methotrexate-paclitaxel as a second line therapy in advanced urothelial cancer. 1219 46


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