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)

Since continuous infusion of daunorubicin and of carboplatin have shown efficacy and reduced toxicity in early phase studies in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), 34 elderly patients with high-risk AML were treated with continuous infusion daunorubicin, 30 mg/m2 per day, from day 1 to day 4, and carboplatin, 200 mg/m2 per day from day 3 to day 7. Seven patients had therapy-related AML and/or AML following a myelodysplastic syndrome at diagnosis, 15 were in first and two in second relapse, and 10 were resistant to previous anthracycline and cytarabine therapy. Nine patients or 26%, with a 95% confidence interval (CI) ranging from 18-67%, achieved complete remission, including one patient at diagnosis (14%, CI: 0-58%), seven with relapsed AML (41%, CI: 18-67%), and one with resistant AML (10%, CI: 0-45%). Median durations of neutropenia below 0.5 x 10(9)/l and of thrombocytopenia below 20 x 10(9)/l were 24 and 20 days respectively. Severe toxicity included infections in 20 patients (59%), bleeding in two (6%), cardiac anomalies in two (6%), and vomiting in one (3%). Overall four patients (12%) died from chemotherapy related toxicity and 21 (62%) had resistant disease. Median overall survival was 4 months and median disease-free survival 8 months. We conclude that this regimen had efficacy with reduced toxicity in relapsed patients. Higher dosages for the same drugs could be tolerated by better risk patients for precise evaluation of cross reactivity with cytarabine-based regimens.
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PMID:Continuous-infusion daunorubicin and carboplatin for high-risk acute myeloid leukemia in the elderly. 164 Jul 28

The benefit of chemotherapy for patients with disseminated non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is controversial. The introduction of cisplatinum in the combination chemotherapy for NSCLC gave rise to higher response rates. To study the question of the usefulness of cisplatinum-based chemotherapy in disseminated NSCLC we conducted a prospective randomized trial comparing best supportive care to vindesine + cisplatin. Between December 1985 and March 1988, 49 patients with stage IV NSCLC were enrolled. Of the 46 eligible patients 24 were in the chemotherapy group and 22 in the best supportive care group. The treatment groups were not significantly different in terms of age, performance status, histology. Toxicity on the chemotherapy arm grade 3 or more was observed in 17.5% for neutropenia, in 8.75% for vomiting. There was one death related to treatment. The overall response rate in the chemotherapy group was 41.7%. Patients of the chemotherapy group had a median survival time of 199 days and the patients of the best supportive care group had a median survival time of 73 days. The difference in survival is highly significant (p less than 0.001).
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PMID:[Is chemotherapy with cisplatin useful in non small cell bronchial cancer at staging IV? Results of a randomized study]. 165 Feb 66

Twenty-eight patients with locally advanced, unresectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) received neoadjuvant chemotherapy with cisplatin (120 mg/m2 on days 1 and 29) and vinblastine (4 mg/m2 weekly for 6 weeks). At the completion of induction chemotherapy, all patients were assessed for resectability. Those patients judged to be resectable underwent thoracotomy. All remaining patients received thoracic radiation therapy (5500 cGy) followed by additional chemotherapy in those patients responding to neoadjuvant treatment. There were 15 partial responses to neoadjuvant chemotherapy for an overall response rate of 54% (95% confidence interval, 36% to 71%). Only five partially responding patients (18%) were thought to have had sufficient tumor regression to allow for a potentially curative resection. However, a complete resection was done in only two patients. Overall median survival was 12 months (range, 4 to 72 months) with 1-year, 2-year, and 3-year survival rates of 54%, 39%, and 11%, respectively. The primary toxicity associated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy was moderate to severe (Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Grade 3 or 4) nausea and emesis in 25% of patients. Hematologic toxicity was relatively modest; only one patient had Grade 4 leukopenia (less than 1000/microliter). Fever and neutropenia were uncommon, and there were no documented septic episodes or treatment-related deaths. Compared with historic controls treated with radiation therapy alone, cisplatin-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy appeared to improve the median and long-term survival of Stage III NSCLC patients modestly.
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PMID:Neoadjuvant cisplatin plus vinblastine chemotherapy in locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer. 165 2

24 patients with unresectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) (14 stage IIIB and 10 stage IV) with a performance status of 70% or higher and without liver metastases received 120-165 mg/m2 epirubicin as an intravenous bolus every 21-28 days up to the maximum cumulative dose of 900 mg/m2. 6 patients (25%) (95% confidence limits 9.8-46.7%) achieved partial remission for a median duration of 7.5 months (range: 3-13+). The median dose actually administered per course was 120 mg/m2 in responsive and non-responsive patients. The dose-limiting side-effect was neutropenia. 1 patient receiving the higher dose died of drug-related infection. Other non-dose-related grade 3 side-effects were alopecia (100%) and vomiting (17%). In 4 patients, the treatment was interrupted because of a greater than 10% reduction in the left ventricular ejection fraction as calculated by radionuclide angiocardiography. None of these patients suffered from cardiac symptoms. The median survival was 10 months (range 1-16). These data suggest that epirubicin at 120-135 mg/m2 may have higher antitumour activity than standard doses in patients with NSCLC. Further studies are needed to clarify whether or not high-dose epirubicin increases, the risk of cardiotoxicity compared to standard doses.
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PMID:Activity of high-dose epirubicin in advanced non-small cell lung cancer. 165 41

Untreated and minimally pretreated solid tumor patients received alternating sequences of taxol and cisplatin. Sequential dose escalation of each agent using taxol doses of 110 or 135 mg/m2 and cisplatin doses of 50 or 75 mg/m2 resulted in four dosage permutations that induced grades 3 and 4 neutropenia in 72% to 84% and 50% to 53% of courses, respectively. Neutropenia was brief, and hospitalization for neutropenia and fever was required in 13% to 24% of courses. However, further escalation of taxol to 170 or 200 mg/m2 induced grade 4 neutropenia in 79% to 82% of courses. At the highest taxol-cisplatin dose level (200 mg/m2 to 75 mg/m2), the mean neutrophil count nadir was 98/microL, and hospitalization for neutropenia and fever was required in 64% of courses. The sequence of cisplatin before taxol, which has less antitumor activity in vitro, induced more profound neutropenia than the alternate sequence. Pharmacologic studies indicated that this difference was probably due to 25% lower taxol clearance rates when cisplatin preceded taxol. Although neurotoxicity was initially thought to be a potentially serious effect of the combination, mild to modest neurotoxicity occurred in only 27% of patients. Adverse effects also included myalgias, alopecia, vomiting, diarrhea, bradycardia, and asymptomatic ventricular tachycardia. Objective responses were noted in melanoma, as well as non-small-cell lung, ovarian, breast, head and neck, colon, and pancreatic carcinomas. Based on these results, the sequence of taxol before cisplatin at doses of 135 and 75 mg/m2, respectively, is recommended for phase II/III trials, with escalation of taxol to 170 mg/m2 if treatment is well tolerated.
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PMID:Sequences of taxol and cisplatin: a phase I and pharmacologic study. 167 80

We conducted a randomized trial to compare the efficacy of imipenem/cilastatine (IPM/CS) monotherapy with that of a combination of latamoxef (LMOX) and tobramycin (TOB) in the initial management of fever and neutropenia in patients with lung cancer. Leukocytopenic febrile patients (less than 3,000 leukocytes per microliters; temperature greater than 38 degrees C) with lung cancer given induction therapy were randomly assigned to receive intravenous treatment with either 1 g IPM/CS twice daily or 2 g LMOX plus 90 mg TOB twice daily. A total 101 febrile episodes were studied. Fifty-one episodes were treated with IPM/CS and 50 with LMOX+TOB. Fifty-nine of the febrile episodes were bacteriologically confirmed, while an organism could not be isolated despite the presence of obvious clinical infection in the remaining 42. The response rate was 82% with IPM/CS and 80% with combination therapy. This difference was not statistically significant. The response rate regarding gram-negative infections was 10 out of 14 (71%) in the IPM/CS group and seven out of 12 (58%) in the LMOX+TOB group. This difference was also not significant (P = 0.484). The response rate in severely neutropenic patients (neutrophils less than 100/microliters) was low (P = 0.078). Three patients in the IPM/CS group were withdrawn from the study due to skin rash and vomiting. Therapy with IPM/CS monotherapy was as effective as a combination regimen.
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PMID:A randomized trial comparing imipenem/cilastatine alone with latamoxef plus tobramycin in febrile neutropenic patients with lung cancer. 180 48

Eighteen patients with advanced solid tumors were treated in a phase I study of cisplatinum in combination with recombinant alpha-2a interferon (Roferon-A, Hoffman-LaRoche, Inc, Nutley, NJ). Roferon-A was administered at a dose of 5 MU/m2 S.C. three times a week and the dose levels of cisplatinum were 15, 20, 25, 33, and 42 mg/m2/week given intravenously. All patients experienced grade I/II fatigue, nausea and vomiting. Grade III toxicity occurred in 4/6 patients at dose level 4. The dose limiting toxicities were myelosuppression [leukopenia (two patients), neutropenia (one patient), thrombocytopenia (one patient)], vomiting (one patient) and severe fatigue leading to a decrease in performance status (one patient). One patient with non-small cell lung carcinoma had a mixed response and another a minor response. The recommended dose level of this combination for phase II studies is cisplatinum 25 mg/m2/week and Roferon-A 5 MU/m2 three times a week.
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PMID:A phase I trial of recombinant alpha-2a interferon (Roferon-A) with weekly cisplatinum. 185 Nov 42

Twenty-one evaluable patients with FIGO stages II-IV epithelial ovarian cancer, median age 57 (range 47-75 years), were treated with ifosfamide (IF), 3 g/m2 diluted in 500 ml saline solution, 8 hour intravenous (i.v.) infusion on days 1-5; mesna 20% of IF dose, i.v. bolus injection, was given at hours 0 and 4; mesna 40% of IF dose by oral route at hours 8 and 12, days 1-5; plus cisplatin 20 mg/m2 diluted in 500 ml saline solution, 2 hour i.v. infusion, days 1-5. Cycles were repeated every 4 weeks. All patients had metastatic lesions (mesentery, pleura, colon, cervix, abdominal wall, lung, liver, bladder, and nodes). Toxicity ranged from mild to moderate. All patients experienced alopecia, nausea, and vomiting. Neutropenia and anemia ranged from mild to moderate. One patient experienced mild brain confusion and two patients microscopic hematuria. Ten clinically complete responses (47%) and five clinically partial responses (23%) were registered, for an overall 70% objective response. However, after a second look performance in 10 patients with clinically complete response, six of 10 patients showed a pathological complete response and four showed pathological partial response. The median duration of complete response is about 33 months, and median partial response duration is 14 months. Although the numbers are small, these data indicate that combination chemotherapy with high dose ifosfamide/mesna plus cisplatin may be an active treatment for advanced ovarian carcinoma.
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PMID:Chemotherapy with high dose ifosfamide/mesna plus cisplatin for the treatment of ovarian cancer: a study of the Grupo de Estudio y Tratamiento Latino-Americano del Cancer. 190 72

Between May 1988 and November 1989, 68 consecutive febrile courses supervening after polychemotherapy for lymphoma outpatients (median age 50 years) were treated by the combination of oral Pefloxacin/Amoxicillin Clavulanic acid. In terms of median data, neutropenia appeared on d9 [d1-d17], and lasted 5 days [2-9] with a PMN nadir observed at 0.104 x 10(9) [0-0.5 x 10(9)/l], while fever rose on d10 [1-24]. In 59 cases (87%), fever and/or focal symptoms disappeared within 3 days, after which treatment was maintained for 7 days. Nine failures were observed, of which 2 were due to abandonment of treatment, 2 to vomiting and 5 to persistence of the original symptoms. Meti Susceptible-Staphylococci were found in blood samples from 2 patients, one of whom, with grade IV lymphoma that had proved resistant to chemotherapy, died. The treatment was found to be effective and well tolerated, offering a good alternative to hospitalization during a transient chemotherapy-induced neutropenia.
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PMID:Home treatment of febrile neutropenia: an empirical oral antibiotic regimen. 191 55

Between September 1988 and August 1990, we treated 35 women with metastatic breast cancer with a novel regimen containing mitoxantrone, fluorouracil (5-FU), and high-dose leucovorin. This regimen was designed to take full advantage of the favorable toxicity profiles of these agents while maintaining a high level of activity. All patients had received previous chemotherapy (adjuvant only, 15 patients; at least one metastatic regimen, 20 patients). Seven patients had received previous doxorubicin, but none within 6 months of study entry. Of 31 assessable patients, 20 (65%) had objective responses (two complete, 18 partial), with a median response duration of 6 months (range, 3 to 16+ months). Four patients with bone metastases (abnormal bone scan only) and pain were not considered assessable by strict response criteria; two of these patients had sustained symptomatic relief for 6 and 8 months, respectively. Myelosuppression was the most frequent toxicity but was mild in most patients; only four hospitalizations for fever and neutropenia were required (2% of courses). No severe thrombocytopenia occurred and no RBC transfusions were required. Alopecia, mucositis, and nausea/vomiting were uncommon and were not severe in any patient. The combination of mitoxantrone, 5-FU, and high-dose leucovorin is well tolerated and active as a first- or second-line treatment for metastatic breast cancer. Comparison with other standard regimens for breast cancer is indicated.
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PMID:Mitoxantrone, fluorouracil, and high-dose leucovorin: an effective, well-tolerated regimen for metastatic breast cancer. 191 22


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