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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (
osteosarcoma
)
16,637
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 13-year-old boy with unresectable pulmonary metastatic osteosarcoma, which was refractory to high dose methotrexate, adriamycin, cisplatin and combination of bleomycin, cyclophosphamide and actinomycin D, was treated by aggressive chemotherapy including the combination of ifosfamide (1 g/m2 x day 1-4),
Carboplatin
(100 mg/m2 x day 1-4) and Vindesine (4 mg/m2 x day 1). After 5 courses of the treatment, pulmonary metastasis regressed, respiratory symptoms resolved completely, and in this regimen no severe toxicity was observed. Thoracotomy for pulmonary metastatic osteosarcoma is an accepted treatment, but treatment for patients with unresectable disease has not been established. It is suggested that this regimen is relatively safe and very effective for refractory and unresectable
osteosarcoma
.
...
PMID:[Successful treatment of metastatic and refractory osteosarcoma by ifosfamide, carboplatin and vindesine: case report]. 188 88
A phase I study of carboplatin (
CBDCA
) was performed in 40 children with advanced cancer. A single course of
CBDCA
consisted of 4 weekly 1-hour infusions followed by a 2-week rest. The starting dose of 100 mg/m2/week was 66% of the maximum tolerated dose in adults. Escalated dose levels given were: 125, 150, 175, and 210 mg/m2. Myelosuppression was dose limiting, with thrombocytopenia more pronounced than leukopenia. There was no evidence of cumulative toxicity. The maximum tolerated dose for children with solid tumors was 210 mg/m2/week X 4. Other side effects included transient nausea and vomiting at the higher dose levels and non-dose-related, reversible changes in creatinine clearance. One patient developed hives. No hepatic toxicity was seen. Among the 28 evaluable patients with solid tumors, one of ten with
osteogenic sarcoma
had complete disappearance of a lung nodule for 15+ months. Two of four patients with medulloblastoma had partial responses by clinical and computerized tomographic scan for 4 and 10 months. All three responders had received prior cisplatin therapy.
CBDCA
has major advantages over cisplatin in terms of reduced toxicity. Responses observed in patients previously treated with cisplatin are encouraging. The recommended phase II dose for children with solid tumors is 175 mg/m2/week X 4 with a 2-week rest.
...
PMID:Phase I study of carboplatin (CBDCA) in children with cancer. 352 46
Carboplatin
has been developed for clinical trials as a less nephrotoxic, less emetogenic analog of cisplatin. In preclinical tumor models it was less potent than the parent compound on a molar basis, but reduced toxicity allowed comparable antitumor doses to be given. In phase I studies its dose-limiting toxicities were reversible myelosuppression, especially thrombocytopenia. Leucopenia and anemia occurred to a lesser degree. Other reported toxicities included nausea, vomiting, malaise, myalgia, arthralgia, ototoxicity, hypomagnesemia, and proteinuria. Nausea and vomiting occurred frequently, but was much less severe than that observed with cisplatin. The incidence of serum creatinine elevations was low. The increase was usually reversible and occurred only in association with administration of aminoglycosides, or abnormal pretreatment renal function. Recommended phase II doses by schedule are: bolus every 4 weeks, 400-500 mg/m2 (560 mg/m2 in children); 24 hour continuous infusion every 4 weeks, 320-400 mg/m2; weekly bolus for 4 consecutive weeks with 2 weeks rest, 100-125 mg/m2 (175 mg/m2 in children); bolus for 5 consecutive days every 4 weeks, 77-95 mg/m2. Objective responses were observed during these phase I studies in adult patients (head and neck, breast, renal carcinomas) and children (
osteosarcoma
, brain stem lesions). In addition to phase II evaluations in all major tumor types, plans for phase III studies in selected tumors are underway.
...
PMID:Results of NCI-sponsored phase I trials with carboplatin. 391 Feb 21
Preclinical studies were performed in mice, rats and dogs of cis-diamminedichloroplatinum(II) (CDDP) and its derivatives cis-1,1-di(aminomethyl) cyclohexane platinum(II) sulphate (TNO-6), cis-diammine-1,1-cyclobutanedicarboxylate platinum(II) (
CBDCA
) and cis-dichloro, trans-dihydroxybis-isopropylamine platinum(IV) (CHIP). In mice toxicity and antitumour activity were determined. All three derivatives were at least as toxic as CDDP for haemopoietic stem cells and were less active than CDDP against the mouse tumours leukaemia L1210 and
osteosarcoma
C22LR. Toxicology studies in rats revealed no renal toxicity after a single dose of TNO-6. Fractionated doses of TNO-6 and
CBDCA
did cause renal toxicity but less than CDDP. CHIP produced little or no kidney damage. In dogs, TNO-6 (1.5 mg/kg) produced more severe kidney damage--although this was reversible--than CDDP (2 mg/kg). Half-lives of distribution were 4.0-5.1 min for TNO-6 and 9.7 min for CDDP, while half-lives of elimination were 3.6-6.6 days and 5.9 days respectively. Plasma levels, normalized for the dose, were at least two times higher after TNO-6 than after CDDP. Twelve weeks after drug administration, plasma levels were undetectable, while tissue concentrations could still be measured. The platinum concentration in kidney cortex was higher after CDDP than after TNO-6.
...
PMID:Preclinical studies on toxicity, antitumour activity and pharmacokinetics of cisplatin and three recently developed derivatives. 638 Oct 64
Forty-eight dogs with histologically confirmed appendicular
osteosarcoma
(
OSA
) entered a prospective clinical trial evaluating treatment with amputation and up to 4 doses of carboplatin given every 21 days. The median disease-free interval (DFI) was 257 days, with 31.2% of the dogs disease-free at 1 year. The median survival time was 321 days, with 35.4% of the dogs alive at 1 year. Dogs with proximal humeral
OSA
had shorter DFI (P = .016) and survival (P = .037) times than dogs with
OSA
at other locations. Dogs with lower body weights ( < 40 kg) had longer DFI (P = .0056) and survival (P = .007) times than larger dogs. Survival times for dogs that received carboplatin were statistically longer than those previously reported for amputation alone (P < .001). DFI and survival times are similar to those previously reported for 2 to 4 doses of cisplatin.
Carboplatin
appears to be a well-tolerated chemotherapeutic drug that can be given safely every 21 days at a dose of 300 mg/m2. Neutropenia was the dose-limiting toxicity in this study.
...
PMID:Amputation and carboplatin for treatment of dogs with osteosarcoma: 48 cases (1991 to 1993). 868 84
Amphotericin B (AmB), a polyene antifungal antibiotic, has been shown to potentiate the cytotoxic effect of different chemotherapeutic drugs in vivo and in vitro. The purpose of this study was to determine whether AmB could enhance the carboplatin antitumor activity in a human
osteosarcoma
xenograft model. Nude mice, bearing s.c. transplanted
osteosarcoma
xenografts, received i.p. an injection of AmB (5 mg/kg) 6 h prior to carboplatin (20 mg/kg) or each of the drugs separately. The effect of treatment was assessed by analyzing tumor growth delay and T/C ratio.
Carboplatin
clearly reduced tumor growth when administered alone. However, an unexpected interaction was seen where AmB significantly decreased the antitumor effect of carboplatin. The present results contradict some earlier in vitro studies and indicate the complexity of this interaction in vivo. Hence, it seems that interactive phenomena in one experimental model, and especially with regard to AmB, cannot be universally applied to all experimental situations.
...
PMID:Antagonistic effect of amphotericin B on carboplatin antitumor activity in human osteosarcoma xenografts. 882 18
Ifosfamide,
Carboplatin
and Etoposide (ICE) therapy was used to treat 4 patients, 2 with refractory
osteosarcoma
, and one each with relapsed brain tumor and newly diagnosed brain tumor. ICE therapy was administered in doses of Ifosfamide 1,800 mg/m2 x 5,
Carboplatin
400 mg/m2 x 2 and Etoposide 100 mg/m2 x 5. A total of 30 courses were administered. Two cases of
osteosarcoma
had a stable disease (range, 3-9 months) and 2 cases of brain tumor had a complete response by magnetic resonance imaging. Moderate or severe toxicity evaluated on a per course basis included: neutropenia 83%, thrombocytopenia 93%, fever 30%, hepatotoxicity 3%, and hemorrhagic cystitis 3%. The median time to hematologic recovery was 20 days. ICE therapy is highly effective for the treatment of refractory or recurrent solid tumors with acceptable toxicity.
...
PMID:[Pilot study of relapsed osteosarcoma and brain tumor with ifosfamide, carboplatin and etoposide (ICE therapy)]. 949 32
A cisplatin (CDDP)-resistant human
osteosarcoma
cell line (OST/R) was established by continuous exposure to CDDP. OST/R cells proved to be 6.73 times more resistant to CDDP compared with parental OST cells, and showed cross-resistance to carboplatin (
CBDCA
). The mechanism of CDDP resistance was a significant decrease of intracellular platinum accumulation which was 40% of that in OST cells. OST/R cells were exposed to CDDP for 6 hours, the platinum was released from the cytoplasm of OST/R cells without reaching a state of equilibrium. DNA synthesis in OST/R cells was not inhibited by CDDP exposure, while in OST cells it was reduced by 50%. These data provide the first evidence that the increased efflux of platinum may play an important role in CDDP-resistance.
...
PMID:Establishment and characterization of an acquired cisplatin-resistant subline in a human osteosarcoma cell line. 967 2
The present study was performed to identify a potent and sequence-specific antisense oligonucleotide (ASO), to inhibit Hdm2 expression in human cancer cell lines and to study the downstream consequences. Ten chimeric 2'-O-methoxyethyl (MoE)-modified hemimers were synthesized that targeted various regions from the 5'- to the 3'-end of Hdm2 mRNA. The IC50 of the most potent ASO, NCH-4401, was subsequently determined and compared to the IC50 of a 2'-MoE-modified ASO, with a complete phosphorothioate backbone (NCH-4668), and to a 3 bp mismatched ASO (NCH4529). NCH4401 inhibited Hdm2 expression in SJSA-1 cells with an IC50 of 120 nm, whereas NCH-4668 was less potent with an IC50 of 180 nm. The mismatched control ASO was completely inactive, indicating a sequence-dependent mechanism of action of NCH-4401. NCH4401 was subsequently used to study the consequences of inhibiting Hdm2 expression in human
osteosarcoma
cells. NCH-4401 completely inhibited Hdm2 protein expression in SJSA-1 cells at a concentration of 300 nm, already 4 h after start of ASO treatment. At an ASO concentration of 300 nM, p53 protein was induced 12.5-fold and p21 was induced 8-fold over background levels, 24 h after start of ASO treatment. The dramatic induction of p53 in SJSA-1 cells prompted us to investigate whether the accumulation of p53 in these cells was followed by induction of apoptosis. However, no signs for apoptosis were detected in SJSA-1 cells, following induction of wild-type p53 using the Yopro method and the induction of caspase-3 activity. SJSA-1 cells were subsequently treated with NCH-4401 at different concentrations in combination with two well-known DNA-damaging agents, i.e. carboplatin and mitomycin C. Apoptosis induction following treatment of cells with DNA-damaging agents and NCH4401 was determined in parallel by measuring caspase-3 activation and uptake of the DNA dye Yopro.
Carboplatin
and mitomycin C together only slightly induced apoptosis in SJSA-1 cells to a factor of approximately 2-fold, as measured by the induction of caspase-3 activity. The downregulation of Hdm2 expression by NCH4401 did not induce apoptosis on its own and did not potentiate the mitomycin C/carboplatin-induced programmed cell death.
...
PMID:Consequences of the inhibition of Hdm2 expression in human osteosarcoma cells using antisense oligonucleotides. 1171 35
Survival following amputation and administration of single-agent carboplatin for treatment of appendicular
osteosarcoma
(
OSA
) in dogs was retrospectively examined. Records of 155 dogs with appendicular
OSA
treated with amputation and single-agent carboplatin were included from 14 centers. Any carboplatin dosage, number of doses, and protocol schedule were eligible for inclusion. The median disease-free interval (DFI) was 256 days. The median overall survival time was 307 days. Similar prognostic survival factors were identified in this study as reported in prior studies of canine appendicular
OSA
. Median DFI and survival were comparable to those reported in the original Bergman et al publication.
Carboplatin
treatment improves the survival probability in dogs with appendicular
OSA
compared to amputation alone and remains an acceptable alternative to adjuvant treatment with cisplatin.
...
PMID:Use of single-agent carboplatin as adjuvant or neoadjuvant therapy in conjunction with amputation for appendicular osteosarcoma in dogs. 1912 62
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