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Query: UMLS:C0027947 (
neutropenia
)
17,527
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The importance of the interval between methotrexate (MTX) and fluorouracil (5-FU) was studied in 168 patients with previously untreated, measurable, advanced colorectal cancer. They were randomized to receive MTX 200 mg/m2, followed by 5-FU 600 mg/m2 either 24 hours (arm A) or 1 hour (arm B) after MTX. All patients received leucovorin (LV) 24 hours after MTX, 10 mg/m2 orally every 6 hours for six doses. The regimen was repeated every 2 weeks, with 5-FU escalation as tolerated. Arm A was significantly better than arm B with respect to overall response rate (29% v 14.5%, P = .026), time to progression (
TTP
; median, 9.9 months v 5.9 months, P = .009), and survival (median, 15.3 months v 11.4 months, P = .003). Significant differences between arms were not found in response rate, median
TTP
, or median survival for the subgroup of patients with rectal primaries who comprised 20% of the patients in each arm. Significant factors prognostic for survival were performance status and number of metastases, as well as treatment. Age did not influence survival. Toxicity was similar in both arms and was primarily gastrointestinal. More mucositis was seen in arm A. There were four toxic deaths secondary to
neutropenia
and infection (one from arm A and three from arm B) and three other deaths (two from arm A and one from arm B) that were possibly drug-related. The combination of MTX with LV rescue and 5-FU is an active regimen in advanced colorectal cancer; its efficacy is increased in colon, but not rectal cancer, when the interval between MTX and 5-FU is long (24 hours) rather than short (1 hour).
...
PMID:The influence of drug interval on the effect of methotrexate and fluorouracil in the treatment of advanced colorectal cancer. 204 74
From March 1993 to February 1997, 43 eligible patients with inoperable stage IIIA (ten patients) and stage IIIB (33 patients), histologically confirmed NSCLC received 3 courses of the ICE combination (ifosfamide 1.5 g m(-2) and mesna 750 mg m(-2) two times a day, cisplatin 25 mg m(-2) and etoposide 100 mg m(-2), all administered intravenously (i.v.) on days 1-3 every 3 weeks) with G-CSF support. After three cycles, patients were submitted to radical surgery or received two additional courses of the ICE regimen and/or curative radiotherapy. Grade 3-4
neutropenia
occurred in 21% of 114 evaluable courses, but was of short duration, leading to neutropenic fever in 5% of the courses. Severe thrombocytopenia and anaemia were observed in 13% and 3% of the courses respectively. Non-haematological toxicity was generally mild with only two episodes of reversible renal impairment. The overall response rate after three chemotherapy courses was 69% (28 partial responses, one complete response). Ten patients (8/10 patients in stage IIIA, 2/33 patients in stage IIIB) underwent radical surgery. Median
TTP
for patients not undergoing surgery (n = 33) was 8 months (range 3-34+); median DFS for patients rendered NED by surgery (n = 10) was 26 months (range 1-54+). Median OS for the entire group was 12.5 months (range 2-57+). The ICE regimen is active in locally advanced NSCLC with acceptable toxicity and warrants further exploration as induction chemotherapy in larger series.
...
PMID:Ifosfamide, cisplatin and etoposide combination in locally advanced inoperable non-small-cell lung cancer: a phase II study. 1057 61
The objective of the study was to assess the efficacy of docetaxel in recurrent supratentorial malignant gliomas. The sample size of the study was determined by the Gehan's method for a response rate of 20% and a beta error of 5%. In the first step 14 patients (age 27-69, median 50; Karnofsky index 50-90, median 75) with recurrent malignant glioma after surgery, radiotherapy and nitrosourea, were enrolled (12 glioblastomas, 2 anaplastic astrocytomas). Docetaxel at the initial dose of 80 mg/m2 was administered every 3 weeks until progression or unacceptable toxicity. A total of 41 cycles was administered. Patients received a median of two cycles (range 1-6). No complete or partial response was observed. Therefore, according to the design of the study, no additional patients were enrolled and the trial was terminated. Two stabilizations were observed (14 and 15 weeks). Median
TTP
was 7 weeks (44 days). Median overall survival from recurrence was 26.5 weeks (6.4 months). Grade 3-4
neutropenia
was observed in 8 patients (57%) but no life-threatening toxicity was observed. Other toxicities were uncommon and mild. Dose reduction was performed in 5 patients. This study suggests that docetaxel displayed no significant activity in patients with malignant recurrent gliomas.
...
PMID:Second line chemotherapy with docetaxel in patients with recurrent malignant glioma: a phase II study. 1126 4
Candidemia is a serious complication in patients following allogeneic blood, marrow, and organ transplantation. Fourteen patients developed nosocomial fungemia among 204 allogeneic marrow transplants performed during 1997-1999. Incidence of hematogenous candidiasis was 6.8 per 100 allogeneic BMT. All 14 had an indwelling central venous catheter (CVC) and fluconazole (100-200 mg daily) was given prophylactically. In 11 (78.5%) neutropenic patients, duration between agranulocytosis and diagnosis of fungemia was (median, +/- s.d.) 10 +/- 8 days. Candida glabrata (53.3%) was the most common yeast species, followed by C. krusei (33.3%), and C. parapsilosis (13.3%). Candida albicans was conspicuously absent. Ten patients (71.4%) had primary transplant-related complication (>2 days) including hemolytic uremic syndrome/thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (HUS/
TTP
) (n = 5), severe hemorrhagic cystitis (n = 3), and bacteremia (n = 2). Seven (50.0%) patients expired and in three (21.4%) deaths were attributed to fungemia. The impact of a primary transplant-related complication on short-term survival in this setting was not significant (P = 0.07) (HUS/
TTP
(P > 0.5);
neutropenia
(P > 0.5); GVHD (P = 0.35)). Removal of CVC did not alter outcome in our group (P > or = 0.5) although in patients with persistent fungemia (>72 h), and those with preceding bacteremia, mortality was significantly higher (P = 0.002). Conventional prognosticators of poor outcome did not adversely effect short-term survival in our transplant recipients with hematogenous candidiasis. The predominance of C. glabrata and C. krusei breakthrough infections was similar to what is seen with high-dose fluconazole (400 mg) prophylaxis, and no adverse effects of low-dose fluconazole in terms of increased incidence of non-susceptible Candida species was seen.
...
PMID:Candida glabrata and Candida krusei fungemia after high-risk allogeneic marrow transplantation: no adverse effect of low-dose fluconazole prophylaxis on incidence and outcome. 1178 48
The combination of CPT-11 with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) in advanced colorectal cancer (ACC) represents an attractive approach. A phase II study was conducted to assess the tolerance and efficacy of CPT-11 in combination with leucovorin-modulated bolus plus infusional 5-FU given according to the de Gramont regimen in chemonaive patients with ACC. Fifty-four patients with histologically confirmed ACC were enrolled. The patients' median age was 65 years; 30 (55.5%) patients were men; performance status (World Health Organization) was 0 in 27 (50%) patients, 1 in 22 (41%), and 2 in 5 (9%). Patients received leucovorin (200 mg/m2/d) as a 2-hour intravenous infusion, followed by 5-FU as an intravenous bolus at 400 mg/m2/d, and then as a 22-hour continuous infusion at 600 mg/m2/d, repeated on 2 consecutive days. CPT-11 (180 mg/m2; 30-minute intravenous infusion) was administered on day 1, simultaneously with leucovorin administration. This cycle was repeated every 2 weeks. Complete response was achieved in 4 patients (8%) and partial response in 19 (37%) (overall response rate: 45%; 95% CI: 24-50.5%). Stable disease was achieved in 16 (31%) patients and progressive disease in 13 (25%). The median duration of response and the median
TTP
were 5 and 8 months, respectively. After a median follow-up period of 11 months, 33 (61%) patients are still alive; the median overall survival has not yet been reached. Thrombocytopenia and anemia were very rare. Grade III/IV
neutropenia
developed in 19 patients (36%); febrile
neutropenia
developed in 4 patients, and 1 of them died of sepsis. Grade IV diarrhea was seen in 7 (13%) patients, and 4 of them required hospitalization. Grade III and IV mucositis was observed in two (4%) and one (2%) patients, respectively. Other toxicities were mild. The combination of CPT-11 and bolus plus infusional 5-FU is a relatively well-tolerated and effective first-line treatment in ACC. Final results from large phase III trials are awaited to clarify whether the CPT-11/5-FU combinations should be considered as "standard" first-line treatment in ACC.
...
PMID:Irinotecan (CPT-11) in combination with infusional 5-fluorouracil and leucovorin (de Gramont regimen) as first-line treatment in patients with advanced colorectal cancer: a multicenter phase II study. 1182
We report a phase II trial of cisplatinum and temozolomide (TMZ) combination in recurrent malignant glioma patients. The DNA repair protein O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase (AGAT) is important in glioblastoma resistance to alkylating antitumor agents. In vitro, cisplatin (CDDP) decreases MGMT activity in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Thirty-three recurrent malignant glioma patients (20 GBM-13 AA) were treated at recurrence or progression with a CDDP and TMZ association. On days 1 and 2, iv CDDP (40 mg/sqm) was administered. TMZ (at the dose of 200 mg/sqm) was administered as a single oral daily-dose on days 2-6 (starting 24 h after the first CDDP dose), the cycle was repeated every 4 weeks. All patients had been previously treated with surgery followed by radiotherapy and CDDP + BCNU chemotherapy. The primary endpoint of the study was progression free survival at 6 months (PFS-6). Secondary endpoints included radiological response and toxicities. Thirty-three patients received a total of 113 courses (median 3 range 1-11). Complete responses were not observed, partial responses were 18.8% with an additional 39.9% of stable disease. For the whole group of patients the PFS at 6 and 12 months was 52% and 15% with a median
TTP
of 33 weeks. PFS-6 for GBM and Anaplastic astrocytoma (AA) were 35% and 69%, respectively. PFS-12 for GBM and AA were 13.8% and 17.3%, respectively. Median
TTP
was 21.3 and 39.5 weeks, respectively. The principal toxic effects of the regimen were:
neutropenia
(5 WHO grade IV), thrombocytopenia (4 WHO grade IV), nausea and vomiting.
...
PMID:Phase II trial of cisplatin plus temozolomide, in recurrent and progressive malignant glioma patients. 1501 88
The established clinical activity of docetaxel and ifosfamide as single agents in anthracycline pre-treated breast cancer, led us to conduct a phase I-II study to define the maximum tolerated dose (MTD), dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs), and clinical activity of the docetaxel+ifosfamide combination in this setting. Patients with histologically confirmed metastatic breast cancer, after failure on prior anthracycline-based chemotherapy, were treated at successive dose levels (DLs) in cohorts of 3-6 with escalated doses of docetaxel 70-100 mg/m(2) over 1 h on day 1 followed by ifosfamide 5-6 g/m(2) divided over days 1+2 (2.5-3.0 g/m(2)/day over 1 h), every 21 days. G-CSF was added once dose-limiting
neutropenia
was encountered at a certain DL and planned to be incorporated prophylactically in subsequent higher DLs. Between March 1997 and December 2002, 65 patients with a median age of 57 years (range, 32-72) and performance status (WHO) of 1 (range, 0-2) were treated at 5 DLs as follows; 21 in phase I DLs (DL1: 3, DL2: 6, DL3: 3, DL4: 6, and DL5: 3) and the remaining 44 were treated at DL4 (total of 50 patients at DL4), which was defined as the level for phase II testing. All patients were assessable for toxicity and 62 for response. DLT (with the addition of G-CSF after DL2) was reached at DL5 with 2/3 initial patients developing febrile
neutropenia
. Clinical response rates (RRs), on an intention-to-treat basis, in phase II were: 56%; (95% CI, 42.2-69.7%); 4 CRs, 24 PRs, 10 SD and 12 PD. The median response duration was 7 mo (3-24 mo), median
TTP
6.5 mo (0.1-26 mo), and median OS 13 mo (0.1-33 mo). Grade 3/4 toxicities included:
neutropenia
in 72% of patients, with 60% developing grade 4
neutropenia
(<or=7 days) and in 10% of these febrile
neutropenia
, while no grade 3/4 thrombocytopenia was observed. Other toxicities included peripheral neuropathy grade 2 only in 10%, grade 1/2 reversible CNS toxicity in 16%, no renal toxicity, grade 2 myalgias in 8%, grade 3 diarrhea in 8%, skin/nail toxicity in 14%, and grade 2 fluid retention in 2% of patients. One patient in the study treated at phase II died as a result of acute liver failure after the first cycle. The present phase I-II study has determined the feasibility, defined the MTD and demonstrated the encouraging activity of the docetaxel-ifosfamide combination in the phase II part of the study. Therefore, future randomized phase III studies versus single-agent docetaxel or combinations of the latter with other active agents are warranted.
...
PMID:Docetaxel-ifosfamide combination in patients with advanced breast cancer failing prior anthracycline-based regimens: results of a phase I-II study. 1759 29
The application of myeloablative Allo-SCT is limited by its associated morbidity and mortality. Reduced-intensity conditioning regimens attempt to diminish these, but are associated with a higher risk of disease relapse. Given the evidence of activity of clofarabine and cytarabine in myelodysplastic syndrome/acute myeloid leukemia (MDS/AML), we explored a novel reduced-intensity conditioning regimen based on this backbone. Patients received clofarabine 40 mg/m(2) i.v. on days -6 to -2, cytarabine 1 g/m(2) i.v. on days -6 to -2 and anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) 1 mg/kg on day -4 and 2.5 mg/kg x 2 days on days -3 and -2. Seven patients were enrolled. Their median age was 54 years; three were with MDS and four with AML. The median duration of
neutropenia
was 14 days and that of thrombocytopenia was 22 days. Toxicities included hand-foot syndrome (57% grade 2), elevated alanine aminotransferase (ALT) (57% grade 3), elevated aspartate aminotransferase (AST) (86% grade 3) and hyperbilirubinemia (29% grade 3-5). No acute GVHD was observed. Enrollment to the trial was halted after three of the first seven patients expired on days +15, +26 and +32. Three of the four surviving patients have relapsed with a median
TTP
of 152 days. This regimen was not sufficiently immunosuppressive to ensure engraftment, and was associated with substantial morbidity and mortality.
...
PMID:Allo-SCT conditioning for myelodysplastic syndrome and acute myeloid leukemia with clofarabine, cytarabine and ATG. 1913 40
Oxaliplatin and irinotecan have proven effective in the treatment of gastric cancer. We attempted to determine whether single nucleotide polymorphisms in ERCC1, GST, TS and UGT1A1 predicted overall survival in gastric cancer patients receiving FOLFOX and/or FOLFIRI chemotherapy. Total genomic DNA was extracted from the whole blood of patients. The PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism technique was applied in order to detect the known variant sites of ERCC1, GST, TS and UGT1A1. The response rate of FOLFOX (N=75) was 24%. Grade 3-4
neutropenia
and neurotoxicity were observed at frequencies of 34.7 and 16%, respectively.
TTP
and OS of first-line administration of FOLFOX (N=35) were 3.1 months (95% CI, 0.1-6.1 months) and 13.9 months (95% CI, 12.2-15.6 months), respectively. Only the GSTM1 positive genotype exhibited a significantly better time to progression (P=0.023). However, significant genotypic variation of TS, GST and ERCC1, which was assumed to affect the activity of oxaliplatin, was not observed to affect RR, toxicity and overall survival. The response rate of FOLFIRI (N=74) was 23%. Grade 3-4
neutropenia
and diarrhea were observed in 55.4 and 9.5% of cases, respectively.
TTP
and OS of first-line administration of FOLFIRI (N=33) was 4.9 months (95% CI, 3.5-6.4 months) and 19.0 months (95% CI, 8.5-29.5 months). The low expression type (2R/2R, 2R/3C and 3C/3C) of TS was associated with a high incidence of grade >or=3
neutropenia
. However, significant genotypic variation of UGT1A1, which was assumed to affect irinotecan toxicity, was not observed to affect RR, toxicity or survival. In this study, the GSTM1 positive genotype evidenced a significantly better time to progression in cases of advanced gastric cancer being treated with FOLFOX. The low expression type (2R/2R, 2R/3C and 3C/3C) of TS was associated with a high incidence of grade >or=3
neutropenia
in cases of advanced gastric cancer treated with FOLFIRI.
...
PMID:Comprehensive analysis of excision repair complementation group 1, glutathione S-transferase, thymidylate synthase and uridine diphosphate glucuronosyl transferase 1A1 polymorphisms predictive for treatment outcome in patients with advanced gastric cancer treated with FOLFOX or FOLFIRI. 1951 14
Vinorelbine (i.v.) plus capecitabine (oral) combination therapy is active in anthracycline/taxane pretreated patients with metastatic breast cancer. Availability of oral vinorelbine provides this combination in an all-oral formulation. Two consecutive phase II trials differing only in vinorelbine administration routes evaluated their respective activities and tolerabilities in this population. In the i.v. group (n = 38) disease control was 61% (37% PR, 24% SD), median
TTP
6.8 months and median survival 11.3 months. In the oral group (n = 38) disease control was 77% (5.4% CR, 34% PR, 38% SD), median
TTP
7 months and median survival 10 months. G3-G4
neutropenia
was more common in the oral group (p < 0.05); G2-G3 anaemia [5] and G3 thrombocytopenia [1] were observed only in the oral group. Although the comparison between the two regimens was not randomized, the results observed in these two consecutive phase II studies may suggest that oral and iv vinorelbine, in combination with capecitabine, can achieve similar responses in patients with metastatic breast cancer refractory to anthra-taxane combinations.
...
PMID:Intravenous versus oral vinorelbine plus capecitabine as second-line treatment in advanced breast cancer patients. A retrospective comparison of two consecutive phase II studies. 2016 91
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