Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Dural sinus thrombosis developed in two children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia during induction treatment with vincristine sulfate, prednisone, and asparaginase. Headache, nausea, emesis, and lethargy were the presenting signs. The diagnosis was confirmed by arteriography. The cause is presumed to be secondary to hypercoagulability due to asparaginase-induced antithrombin III deficiency. The patients received anticoagulation therapy and recovered completely. Only two of the six reported patients without heparinization survived.
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PMID:Dural sinus thrombosis in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 694 95

17 patients (age 15-58 years) with refractory acute leukaemia (14 AML, 3 ALL) were treated with high dose cytosine arabinoside (AraC) at a dose of 3000 mg/m2, twice daily for 6 d (13 patients with AraC alone, 4 patients with AraC and doxorubicin). 9 patients achieved complete remission (53%) and 2 a partial remission. Although sophisticated isolation and blood banking facilities are required during the pancytopenic period, the toxicity of this treatment was acceptable. Vomiting, headache, somnolence, fever, conjunctivitis and cardiac arrhythmias were found most frequently. The unexpected pulmonary failure in 3 patients was worrisome. The duration of remissions was from 1 to 12 months. Results obtained with high dose AraC are satisfactory and hold promise for the treatment of patients with previously untreated AML.
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PMID:High dose cytosine arabinoside in the management of refractory acute leukaemia. 695 4

2'-Deoxycoformycin (2'-dCF), a tight-binding inhibitor of adenosine deaminase, was administered to 26 pediatric patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in a Phase I study. Doses ranged from 0.25 to 1.0 mg/kg given i.v. for 3 consecutive days. Common toxicity included nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, hepatocellular enzyme elevations, and conjunctivitis. Lymphopenia occurred in all patients. The most serious adverse effects were acute tubular necrosis and central nervous system toxicity, which appeared to be dose related. In addition, two patients given the 0.75-mg/kg dose developed severe hepatic toxicity, although this could not be ascribed definitively to 2'-dCF. Antitumor activity was observed in eight patients, two of whom experienced a complete remission. Inhibition of lymphoblast adenosine deaminase activity was noted in the majority of cases and was observed at all doses. Antileukemic activity occurred at doses of 2'-dCF which were not associated with limiting toxicities. These results suggest that 2'-dCF is active against acute lymphoblastic leukemia and that a starting dose of 0.5 mg/kg/day be utilized in Phase II studies.
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PMID:Phase I study of 2'-deoxycoformycin in acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 697 90

Phase II clinical trials of L-asparaginase of leunase manufactured by "Kyowa" (Japan) was performed in cooperation by 5 institutions of the USSR on 49 patients with various forms of hemoblastosis, including 15 patients aged 1 to 15 and 34 patients aged 16 to 75. The drug was used in a daily dose of 200 IU per 1 kg body weight administered as intravenous drips daily for 2--3 weeks. The daily dose was divided into 2 doses administered at an interval of 12 hours. The efficiency of the treatment did not depend on the patients' sex. Significant efficiency of leunase was observed in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (85.7 per cent). The use of the drug in treatment of adults with systemic malignant blood affections was less effective. Some effects recorded in patients with generalized forms of hematosarcoma were transient. The following side effects were noted: nausea, vomiting in 8 children and 13 adults, allergic reactions in the form of pruritus and rashes in 8 adults, impairment of liver and pancreatic functions in 2 children and 1 adult. Acute pancreatonecrosis was recorded in one child. The effect on the peripheral blood was insignificant. Leunase has probably no advantages as compared to other L-asparaginase preparations.
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PMID:[L-asparaginase study results (phase II of the clinical trials)]. 699 70

Rubidazone was administered to 24 children with advanced solid tumors or leukemia. The dose ranged from 80 to 150 mg/m2/IV daily to a total dose of 160 to 450 mg/m2/course. This course was repeated at intervals of approximately three weeks. Eighteen of 24 patients (75%) had received adriamycin and daunomycin as part of prior chemotherapy. The major toxic effects observed were myelosuppression, nausea, vomiting, mucositis, and skin rash. Four patients developed abnormal echocardiograms following the rubidazone therapy, 2 manifested clinical cardiac failure, of which one had anthracycline cardiomyopathic changes on autopsy. One of 7 adequately treated ALL patients achieved M2 marrow and improved peripheral counts for 3 weeks. One of the 2 neuroblastoma patients had subjective improvement of bone pain for 2 months. Rubidazone, in a previous heavily treated group of patients used in this study, had dosages of 360 and 450 mg/m2 which produced marrow hyperplasia to aplasia, with only minimal responses.
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PMID:Phase I trial of rubidazone (NSC 164011) in children with cancer. 726 27

A phase I trial of diglycoaldehyde (Inox) in children with leukemia established that the maximum tolerated dose of a 5-day schedule was 1.5 g/m2/day. A phase II study was undertaken by the Children's Cancer Study Group to evaluate the efficacy of this dose. Forty-seven children with acute leukemia refractory to conventional forms of therapy were entered in the study: 29 patients with acute lymphocyte leukemia/acute undifferentiated leukemia and 18 with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. Inox was administered at a dose of 1.5 g/m2 as a 4-6 hour iv infusion daily for 5 days every 14 days. Toxic effects included myelosuppression, proteinuria, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, local tissue reactions, hypocalcemia, transitory serum amylase elevation, and transitory hypotension. There was one life-threatening episode of drug-related renal toxicity. Of the 27 patients who received a minimum of two courses, partial remissions were observed in two patients with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. Inox was inactive against advanced acute lymphocytic leukemia.
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PMID:Phase II evaluation of diglycoaldehyde (Inox) in children with acute leukemia: a children's cancer study group report. 742 52

Tropisetron (Navoban, Sandoz Pharma Ltd., Basel, Switzerland), a selective antagonist of the serotonin receptor (5-HT3) dosed once-daily at 0.2 mg/kg (with a maximum of 5 mg daily), was evaluated in the prevention of chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting in 131 children with a median age of 5 years (age 10 weeks to 21 years). Acute lymphocytic leukemia was the most common malignancy (49%). Most children (82%) had received cytotoxic chemotherapy before enrollment. Patients received tropisetron during one or more courses of chemotherapy (455 courses in total). Tropisetron was administered slowly intravenously as a single dose before the start of chemotherapy on day 1 and intravenously or by mouth the subsequent days as a single daily dose (median treatment duration: 5 days). Response to tropisetron per 24 hour period on the first 5 days of each chemotherapy course was graded as complete (absence of both nausea and vomiting), partial (one to four vomits and/or less than 5 hours of nausea), or failure. Overall complete response on day 1 was observed in 305 out of 455 chemotherapy courses (67%). The patients receiving intravenous chemotherapy (N = 92) had a 70% complete response rate and a 26% partial response rate on day 1, both for course 1 and course 2. The percentage of complete responders increased the subsequent days of the course. Emesis after day 1 was observed primarily during courses with the most emetogenic chemotherapy. No side-effects of tropisetron other than a single case of diarrhoea were documented in this study.
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PMID:Tropisetron in the prevention of nausea and vomiting in 131 children receiving cytotoxic chemotherapy. 902 27

Twenty two patients with acute relapsed leukemia (AML 20, ALL 2) were treated with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (DAC) and either m-amsacrine or idarubicin. DAC was administered as a 6-h infusion, every 12 h for 6 days in combination with either m-amsacrine (120 mg/m2) as a 1-h infusion on days 6 and 7 (n = 19) or idarubicin (12 mg/m2) as a 15-min infusion on days 5, 6 and 7 (n = 3). Thirteen patients (59%) achieved a complete remission. The treatment was complicated by nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea with signs of peritonitis (n = 9), weight loss (n = 7), cerebellar or cerebral toxicity (n = 2), gastrointestinal bleeding (n = 3), liver toxicity (n = 2) and prolonged myelosuppression. Median duration of remission was 4 months (range 1-30). The preliminary data show that DAC is an anti-leukemic agent, comparable to high dose Ara-C with comparable severe toxicity.
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PMID:Preliminary results with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (DAC)-containing chemotherapy in patients with relapsed or refractory acute leukemia. The EORTC Leukemia Cooperative Group. 768 57

One hundred and thirty-one children with a median age of 5 years were administered Navoban (tropisetron), a selective antagonist of the serotonin receptor (5-HT3), dosed once daily at 0.2 mg/kg (with a maximum of 5 mg daily) in a study aimed at evaluating the prevention of nausea and vomiting induced by anti-cancer chemotherapy. The most common malignancy (in 49% of patients) was acute lymphocytic leukaemia. Patients received Navoban during one or more courses of emetogenic chemotherapy for a total of 455 courses administered intravenously or intravenously and intrathecally (IV + IT). Most patients (89%) had already received cytotoxic chemotherapy before enrollment for the trial. On Day 1, Navoban was administered slowly and intravenously as a single dose before the start of chemotherapy, or by mouth as a single daily dose on subsequent days (median treatment duration = 5 days). On the first 5 days of each course of chemotherapy, response to Navoban per 24-hour period was graded as: complete (absence of both nausea and vomiting), partial (1-4 vomits and/or less than 5 hours of nausea), or failure (more than 4 vomits and/or at least 5 hours of nausea). Ninety-six per cent of the intravenous chemotherapy group and 97% of the IV + IT chemotherapy group had a complete (70% and 55% respectively) or partial (26% and 42% respectively) response during the first 24-hour period of the first course in which Navoban was used. The second and subsequent courses yielded similar percentages. Delayed emesis was observed mainly during those courses employing the most emetogenic chemotherapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Control of nausea and vomiting by Navoban (tropisetron) in 131 children receiving cytotoxic chemotherapy. 774 70

Thirty adult patients with relapsing or refractory acute leukemia were treated with mitoxantrone 10 mg/m2 daily by 20-min intravenous infusion for 5 days and cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C) 200 mg/m2 daily by continuous infusion for 5 days. Complete remission was obtained in 9 of 15 patients (60%) with acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML), with a mean duration of 6 months (range 2-12 months). Among 15 patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), complete remission was obtained in 5 patients (33.3%), with a mean duration of 2 months. Partial remission was achieved in 2 patients with AML and 1 patient with ALL. Myelosuppression developed in all patients following chemotherapy. Nonhematologic side effects consisted of nausea, vomiting, mild alopecia, stomatitis and transient hepatic dysfunction. No cardiopulmonary toxicity or neurotoxicity was observed. Our therapeutic responses are similar to those obtained with high-dose Ara-C and mitoxantrone but with less toxicity.
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PMID:Mitoxantrone and standard dose cytosine arabinoside therapy in refractory or relapsed acute leukemia. 798 76


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