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)

Thirty-seven patients with advanced soft tissue sarcoma were treated with merbarone utilizing a daily intravenous schedule for five days. Only one partial response was observed in the thirty-three evaluable patients. The major toxicities were renal, with elevation of creatinine and/or proteinuria, and gastrointestinal, with mild to moderate nausea and vomiting. Merbarone in this dose and schedule has minimal activity in soft tissue sarcoma.
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PMID:Phase II trial of merbarone in soft tissue sarcoma. A Southwest Oncology Group study. 148 11

In the present investigation, administration of a single i.p. dose of the anticancer drug merbarone [5-(N-phenylcarboxamido)-2-thiobarbituric acid] produced an acute and reversible decrease in renal function in female but not male Fischer 344 rats. The renal lesion in female rats was biochemically characterized as a decrease in p-aminohippuric acid accumulation by renal slices along with polyuria, glucosuria, proteinuria, and enzymuria. These functional changes were accompanied by histopathologic changes of focal tubular necrosis that was confined to the deep cortex and outer stripe of the outer medulla. The changes in these parameters were dose-dependent and were observed at doses as low as 0.2 x MELD(10) (12 mg/kg). This low merbarone dose increased urinary glucose and protein excretion by 26- and 9-fold, respectively, in the initial 16-h urine collection in female rats. This increase was accompanied by a 2- to 15-fold increase in the excretion of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG), gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GTP), and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activities. No significant changes in renal function were observed in male rats apart from mild enzymuria after a high dose of merbarone (36 mg/kg). The drug did not increase urea nitrogen levels in male or female rats, reflecting the focal nature of this tubular lesion. Merbarone produced small elevations in serum transaminase activities [i.e., glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase (GOT), glutamic-pyruvic transaminase (GPT)] at doses that produced marked alterations in renal function in female rats, suggesting only mild hepatotoxicity. The present study establishes the kidney as a possible dose-limiting target organ for merbarone toxicity.
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PMID:Nephrotoxicity of 5-(N-phenylcarboxamido)-2-thiobarbituric acid in the Fischer 344 rat. 259 97

Twenty-nine patients with advanced pancreatic adenocarcinoma were treated with merbarone, utilizing a daily intravenous schedule for 5 days. Only two partial responses of short duration were observed. The major toxicities were renal, with an increase in creatinine or proteinuria in 17 patients, and mild to moderate nausea and vomiting seen in 22 patients. Merbarone in this dose and schedule has minimal activity in pancreatic cancer.
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PMID:Phase II trial of merbarone in pancreatic carcinoma. A Southwest Oncology Group study. 832 10

Merbarone, NSC 336628, is an investigational anticancer drug with activity against experimental animal tumors including melanoma. This paper presents results of a Phase II clinical study of merbarone in patients with biopsy proven stage IV malignant melanoma without prior chemotherapy and with no evidence of CNS involvement. Thirty-five patients with median age 58 (range 27-81), with performance status 0-2 were treated with merbarone 1000 mg/m2/day for five days by intravenous continuous infusion repeated every 3 weeks. All patients (21 males and 14 females) were evaluable for toxicity. Two patients were not evaluable for response having been removed from protocol treatment due to toxicity and received other treatment during the first course of chemotherapy. Among the evaluable patients there was one complete response in a supraclavicular lymph node lasting four months and one partial liver response lasting three months. The remaining thirty-one patients were non-responders. Of these one had a stable disease lasting 21 months. The overall objective response rate was 6% (2/35) with a 95% confidence interval of 1%-19%. Twenty-six of the 35 patients have died. The estimated median survival of the entire group was 9 months with a 95% confidence interval six to eleven months. Renal toxicity was dose-limiting and manifested as increasing serum creatinine (54% of patients), proteinuria (51%) and hematuria (9%). One patient experienced grade 4 creatinine increase, proteinuria and acute renal failure. Other toxicities included nausea (71%), vomiting (51%0, malaise (23%), weakness (20%), alopecia (17%), diarrhea (17), anorexia (14%) transaminase (SGOT, SGPT) increase (14%), constipation (14%), alkaline phosphatase or 5'nucleotidase increase (9%), and fever (9%). Hematologic toxicity (granulocytopenia, leukopenia, and anemia) was generally mild and infrequent (29%, only one patient had grade 4 granulocytopenia). Overall 9 patients (26%) had at least one grade 3 toxicity. We conclude that merbarone at this dose and schedule has detectable but minimal activity in the treatment of metastatic malignant melanoma and given the significant renal toxicity this schedule does not merit further evaluation in this disease.
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PMID:Evaluation of merbarone (NSC 336628) in disseminated malignant melanoma. A Southwest Oncology Group study. 861 77