Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (proteinuria)
24,015 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We compared the acute tubular nephrotoxicity of three platinum compounds in children and adults with solid tumors by monitoring the urinary excretion of alanine aminopeptidase, N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase, and total protein. Cisplatin (100 mg/m2) was administered with mannitol, or at a twofold larger total dosage (50 mg/m2 per day for 4 days) in a 3% saline infusion. Carboplatin (300 mg/m2) was administered in combination with 5-fluorouracil, and iproplatin was administered in dosages ranging from 216 to 388 mg/m2. Enzymuria and proteinuria induced by cisplatin at a total dosage of 200 mg/m2 on a divided schedule did not significantly differ from that observed for the single 100 mg/m2 dose. Enzymuria and proteinuria induced by carboplatin and iproplatin were significantly less than that for cisplatin; however, one patient developed chronic tubular damage after three courses of carboplatin, and the acute tubular toxicity of iproplatin in one of 15 patients was exceptional. Our findings support the value of administering cisplatin in hypertonic saline on a divided schedule as a strategy to reduce acute tubular damage. Although carboplatin and iproplatin are less nephrotoxic than cisplatin, occasionally patients experience subclinical acute or chronic tubular damage that may lead to overt nephrotoxicity with continued therapy.
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PMID:Carboplatin (CBDCA), iproplatin (CHIP), and high dose cisplatin in hypertonic saline evaluated for tubular nephrotoxicity. 288 Jun 77

A toxicology study of cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) (CDDP), aqua(1,1-bis-(aminomethyl)cyclohexane)sulfatoplatinum(II) (TNO-6), diammine(1,1-cyclobutanedicarboxylato)platinum(II) (CBDCA), cis-dichloro-trans-dihydroxo-cis-bis(isopropylamine)platinum-(IV) (CHIP) and ethylenediaminemalonatoplatinum(II) (JM-40) was carried out in dogs. The main purpose of the study was to compare the results with those obtained earlier in mice and rats and with the toxicology data in humans. Each platinum compound was tested in three dogs. Each dog received three intravenous bolus injections at intervals of 3 weeks. The compounds were administered in dosages of 1.2, 1.0, 12, 10 (or 6) and 10 mg/kg, respectively. Toxic death occurred for two dogs (both on day 54) from haematotoxicity (10 mg/kg CHIP) and renal toxicity (TNO-6), respectively. Serum urea nitrogen and creatinine concentrations were variable after TNO-6 and remained within normal values after treatment with the other compounds. Severe proteinuria was observed in all three dogs treated with TNO-6. Values returned to normal within 16 days. JM-40 did not cause significant proteinuria. CDDP, CBDCA and CHIP caused short-lasting and slight proteinuria. CHIP caused a severe reduction in the number of leukocytes and platelets, while the other drugs caused acceptable reductions. Except after the high dose CHIP regimen, haematotoxicity was of a transient nature. Vomiting in order of severity occurred after TNO-6, CHIP, CDDP and JM-40, while CBDCA did not cause any vomiting. The dogs were sacrificed 6 weeks after the last drug dose. Organs were fixed for histopathology to complete and support clinical-toxicological parameters. On the basis of the results from the single-dose study in dogs and those obtained earlier in mice and rats it can be concluded that the gain from the use of the dog as a prognosticator for organ toxicity in man was disappointing and limited to the prediction of vomiting.
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PMID:Preclinical toxicology of platinum analogues in dogs. 330 82

Urinary excretion of N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase (NAG) is an early marker of nephrotoxicity. NAG activity was assayed by the fluorimetric method of Leaback and Walker in 17 patients treated (22 courses) with carboplatin (CBDCA, 220-550 mg/m2) before infusion and 24, 48, 72 and 96 h after. Increased excretion of NAG, a sensitive index of renal tubular damage, was observed following 10 of the 22 courses. A transient increase in plasma creatinine and/or abnormal proteinuria was observed in 6 cases. Impaired renal function prior to therapy seems to be a predisposing factor to the nephrotoxicity.
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PMID:Enzymuria in carboplatin nephrotoxicity. 331 51

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.
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PMID:Results of NCI-sponsored phase I trials with carboplatin. 391 Feb 21

Carboplatin, a new platinum analogue, was administered intravenously on a schedule of a single dose every five weeks to 23 patients with advanced malignant solid tumors. Patients were treated at six dosage levels ranging from 200-550 mg/m2 every five weeks. Thrombocytopenia was dose-limiting. At 550 mg/m2 Carboplatin, the median platelet nadir was 65 000/mm3. Leukopenia was common, but usually of mild to moderate degree. Gastrointestinal upset was commonly seen at all dose levels, but 35% of the patients experienced no vomiting. No significant increase of the serum creatinine following Carboplatin was seen. In 16 patients serial determinations of the creatinine clearance were performed. The median base line creatinine clearance was 87 (50-155) ml/min and dropped to a median lowest creatinine clearance of 69 (23-171) ml/min on day four (p less than 0.05). The median creatinine clearance before the next Carboplatin treatment was 89 (42-155) ml/min. No significant proteinuria or electrolyte disturbances were noted. Carboplatin exhibited antitumor activity in ovarian, endometrial, thyroid and gastric carcinomas. The maximally tolerated dose appears to be 550 mg/m2 every five weeks. A starting dose of 450 mg/m2 seems to be appropriate for Phase II studies. In patients with impaired renal function and/or prior cis-Platin chemotherapy, Carboplatin at doses of 200-500 mg/m2 induced renal and severe hematological toxicity.
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PMID:A phase I trial of cis-diammine-1,1-cyclobutane dicarboxylate platinum II (Carboplatin, CBDCA, JM-8) with a single dose every five week-schedule. 639 47

The patient was a 73-year-old Japanese female diagnosed with stage IIIc primary peritoneal cancer. After undergoing total hysterectomy and bilateral oophorectomy, she received regimens consisting of paclitaxel (PTX) and carboplatin (CBDCA). She subsequently developed recurrence four years after the disease onset and was treated with PTX, CBDCA and the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) inhibitor bevacizumab (Bev). Although clinical remission was maintained with the administration of Bev monotherapy every three weeks, proteinuria was detected six months later, and gradually increased. The findings of a renal biopsy showed diffuse wrinkling and double contouring of the glomerular tufts under light microscopy, although no immune complex deposition was observed on immunostaining. Additionally, electron microscopy showed hypertrophy of glomerular endothelial cells and widening of the subendothelial spaces. These histopathological findings were fully consistent with those of reported patients treated with VEGF inhibitors. The proteinuria attenuated following the initiation of treatment with losartan. Therefore, the administration of renoprotective therapy contributed to the patient's ability to continue the anticancer regimen with Bev in this case.
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PMID:[A case of glomerulopathy associated with the vascular endothelial growth factor inhibitor bevacizumab]. 2513 32