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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pirarubicin is a more lipophilic derivative of doxorubicin, with a higher uptake rate of cells, lower cardiotoxicity and better antitumor efficacy in preclinical models. Thirty-four patients with
metastatic breast cancer
were treated in a multicenter phase II study with pirarubicin (THP) using a dosage of 75 mg/m2/every 3 weeks. The patients had a median age of 56 years (range 41-73) and a performance status of WHO grade 0-2. Patients pretreated with anthracyclines, or who were older than 75 years and without sufficient bone marrow reserve were excluded. The 32 evaluable patients received a median number of 4 cycles (range 2-8). The myelosuppression was dose-limiting and led to infections (grades 1 and 2) in 5 patients. Twenty-eight patients developed leukocytopenia grade 3 and 4 toxicity and 7 patients experienced thrombocytopenia grade 1 and 2. The drug was subjectively well tolerated and nausea,
vomiting
and alopecia were mild. One complete remission with a duration of 15.4 months (67 weeks) and 7 partial remissions with a median duration of 9.3 months (40 weeks) were achieved, which resulted in an overall response rate of 25%. Twenty-one patients were stable for 17 weeks (median) under the treatment with pirarubicin.
...
PMID:Phase II study of pirarubicin in metastatic breast cancer. 220 3
Thirty-three patients with
metastatic breast cancer
received 135 cycles of chemotherapy consisting of mitoxantrone, methotrexate and chlorambucil. Forty-eight per cent of the patients achieved a partial response, and the median response duration was 8 months. Patchy alopecia was seen in 10 patients, but only 2 required a wig. In approximately half of the cycles, there were no complaints of nausea or
vomiting
. Nausea only was recorded in 27% of the cycles; nausea and vomiting in 26%. This combination regimen is active with a low degree of subjective toxicity.
...
PMID:Mitoxantrone, methotrexate and chlorambucil in metastatic breast cancer, a combination with relatively low subjective toxicity. 231 19
Fourteen patients with
metastatic breast cancer
previously treated with one chemotherapy regimen received Pirarubicin at a dose of 70 mg/m2 at 3-week intervals. In 7 patients the dose had to be reduced, in 1 patient to 40 mg/m2 and in 6 patients to 50-60 mg/m2. There were 1 complete and 2 partial remissions. These objective responses were observed in soft tissue, lung and pleural areas and lasted 1+; 4+ and 5+ months. Grade 3 and 4 leukopenia was found in 42%, grade 3 thrombocytopenia in 2%, grade 3 nausea/
vomiting
in 29% of the cycles. Grade 1 and 2 alopecia occurred in 64% of the patients, the remaining 36% of the patients did not suffer from any alopecia. No cardiotoxic side effects were observed in 13 patients. In 1 patient with severe coronary heart disease extrasystoles and reduction in left ventricular ejection fraction occurred. Pirarubicin has antitumor activity in previously treated
metastatic breast cancer
patients.
...
PMID:Phase II study of pirarubicin (THP-adriamycin) in metastatic breast cancer patients. 231 31
In a phase II study, 77 patients with
metastatic breast cancer
were treated with pirarubicin, 70 mg/m2 iv every 3 weeks. Most of them had received prior hormonal (n = 39) and/or chemotherapeutic drug treatment for advanced disease, including anthracycline-containing regimens in 17. After a median of 5.5 treatment cycles (range 1-14), objective tumor response was seen in 22/71 (31%) evaluable patients (4CR, 18 PR). Stable disease occurred in 34 (48%) patients, whereas the tumor progressed in 15 (21%). Significant hematologic toxicity (WHO grade III-IV) requiring interval and/or dose adjustments was observed in 41 (58%) patients. Other treatment-related side effects were generally mild, and included alopecia in 52 (73%), nausea and/or
emesis
in 50 (70%), and stomatitis and diarrhea in 3 patients each. There was no treatment-related death, nor was there any evidence of cardiac toxicity thus far. In summary, the early results of this trial suggest that pirarubicin is an active and rather well tolerated drug in pretreated patients with advanced breast cancer.
...
PMID:Pirarubicin (4'-o-tetrahydropyranil-adriamycin) for treatment of advanced breast cancer. A Clinical Phase II study. 238 8
This study was designed to assess the role of dosage of chemotherapy for treatment of
metastatic breast cancer
. One hundred thirty-three patients without prior chemotherapy for metastatic disease were randomly allocated to receive two different dose levels of cyclophosphamide (C), methotrexate (M), and fluorouracil (F), administered intravenously (IV) every 3 weeks. Patients were stratified by sites of disease (visceral, bone, or soft-tissue dominant) and by interval from primary surgery to first recurrence. Doses on the higher-dose arm were 600 mg/m2 (C,F) and 40 mg/m2 (M) with escalation if possible; doses on the lower-dose arm were 300 mg/m2 (C,F) and 20 mg/m2 (M) without escalation. Patients who failed to respond to lower-dose CMF were crossed over to the higher-dose arm. Patients randomized to the higher-dose arm had longer survival measured from initiation of chemotherapy (median survival, 15.6 months v 12.8 months, P = .026 by log-rank test), but the effect of dose was of borderline significance (P approximately 0.12) when adjusted for a chance imbalance between the two arms in the time from first relapse to randomization, using the Cox proportional hazards model. Response rates (International Union Against Cancer [UICC] criteria) for patients with measurable disease were higher-dose arm: 16/53 (30%) and lower-dose arm: 6/53 (11%), (P = .03). Only one of 37 patients responded on crossover from the lower- to the higher-dose arm. Patients experienced more
vomiting
, myelosuppression, conjunctivitis, and alopecia when receiving higher doses of chemotherapy. A series of 34 linear analogue self-assessment scales were used to make detailed quality of life assessments on a subset of 49 patients. These scales confirmed greater toxicity in the immediate posttreatment period, but also a trend to improvement in general health and some disease-related indices, in patients receiving higher-dose chemotherapy. This trial suggests that better palliation is achieved by using full-dose chemotherapy.
...
PMID:A randomized trial of two dose levels of cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, and fluorouracil chemotherapy for patients with metastatic breast cancer. 291 36
Fourteen patients with refractory
metastatic breast cancer
were treated with high dose chemotherapy and autologous hematopoietic stem cell rescue. All patients received cyclophosphamide (7.5 g/m2 over 3 days) and thiotepa (150-225 mg/m2 over 3 days), three patients in addition received melphalan (4.5 mg/kg), and seven patients received carmustine (150-562 mg/m2). Toxicities included pancytopenia, infection, hemorrhagic cystitis, skin rash, nausea,
vomiting
, diarrhea, and mucositis. There was one toxic death secondary to sepsis and ventricular tachycardia. The overall response rate was 77% including a 15% complete response rate. The overall median survival for all patients was 6.0 months (range 2-22 months). The median survival for nonresponders was 3.5 months. The median duration of response was 89 days (range 40-262). In our experience high dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell reinfusion produces a high response rate in refractory breast cancer. However, because of the short duration of response and overall survival, we feel this type of therapy should be utilized earlier in the course of disease.
...
PMID:High dose chemotherapy with autologous hematopoietic stem cell support in the treatment of refractory stage IV breast carcinoma. 250 79
We designed a phase II study to determine whether induction chemotherapy (CT) consisting of leucovorin, vincristine, methotrexate, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide (LOMAC) followed by high-dose intensification chemotherapy (ICT) with cyclophosphamide, thiotepa, and autologous stem cell rescue (ASCR) could increase the complete response (CR) rate and survival in women with
stage IV breast cancer
. Twenty-nine women were enrolled on study; 16 patients had received prior adjuvant chemotherapy and no patient had received chemotherapy for stage IV disease. Two patients were found to be ineligible and excluded from further analysis. Of the 27 patients treated, four (15%) obtained a CR and 15 (56%) a partial response (PR) after LOMAC induction, for an overall response rate of 70%. Of the 22 patients treated with ICT, 12 patients had a CR, and nine were in PR after induction and converted to CR after ICT. The toxicities included nausea/
vomiting
, mucositis, diarrhea, dermatitis, alopecia, and infections secondary to neutropenia. The 1-year survival is 60%; the median has not yet been reached. The time to treatment failure for patients on study is 10 months. The treatment approach of ICT and ASCR following induction chemotherapy can lead to an improved CR rate in
stage IV breast cancer
. How this increased CR rate leads to a prolonged disease-free survival requires further follow-up.
...
PMID:High-dose consolidation therapy with autologous stem cell rescue in stage IV breast cancer. 251 Dec 76
A randomized trial was performed to determine relative efficacy and toxicity of two first-line combination chemotherapy regimens in women with
metastatic breast cancer
: CFP (cyclophosphamide, 5-fluorouracil, prednisone) and CMFP (cyclophosphamide, 5-fluorouracil, methotrexate, prednisone). Both regimens have reported efficacy in this setting but differ in dosages and scheduling of the agents they have in common. Three hundred thirty-six women with no prior chemotherapy for metastatic disease were eligible and evaluable, and 309 had either measurable or evaluable disease and were assessable for objective response. Responses were seen in 65 of 153 (42%) on CFP and 83 of 156 (53%) on CMFP (two-sided P = 0.06). Median durations of response were 7.1 months for CFP and 8.5 months for CMFP (log-rank, two-sided P = 0.67). Considering all 336 patients, the median times to disease progression were 4.7 months for CFP and 6.2 months for CMFP (log-rank P = 0.31) and median survivals were 15.2 and 14.9 months, respectively (log-rank P = 0.88). Covariate analysis did not alter these findings. Median leukocyte nadirs were 1800 for CFP and 1500 for CMFP, with 22% and 21%, respectively, having nadirs less than 1000/microliters.
Emesis
was more frequent on CFP (49%) than on CMFP (26%) but was severe in only 7% and 5%, respectively. It is concluded that despite a higher response rate on CMFP and some differences in toxicities including a higher reported incidence of
emesis
on CFP, there was no substantial difference in efficacy or tolerability between the two regimens.
...
PMID:Randomized clinical trial of CFP versus CMFP in women with metastatic breast cancer. 264 21
Twenty-six patients with
metastatic breast cancer
who had previously responded to one or more endocrine therapies participated in a clinical trial of the combination of trilostane and hydrocortisone for subsequent disease progression. Of these, one patient achieved complete remission (4%), and five had partial response (19%). The median time to progression from initiation of therapy for responding patients was six months (range: 4 - 32 + months). Major toxicities included nausea/
vomiting
(16 patients), facial flushing (14), abdominal cramping (11), and oral paresthesia (10). Therapy was discontinued in four patients (15%) because of drug intolerance. Fourteen patients who failed trilostane were treated with aminoglutethimide and hydrocortisone. Six patients showed objective response (PR + MR). These data show that trilostane and hydrocortisone in combination can produce an objective response in a significant fraction of patients and that the combination has a different spectrum of toxicity from aminoglutethimide/hydrocortisone. A small number of patients crossed over to aminoglutethimide showed a few objective responses, suggesting a partial lack of cross-resistance between the two antiadrenal drugs.
...
PMID:Trilostane with hydrocortisone in treatment of metastatic breast cancer. 265 3
Sixty-three evaluable patients with metastatic and
stage IV breast cancer
who had not previously undergone chemo-endocrine therapy were treated with a combination chemoendocrine therapy regimen consisting of cyclophosphamide 100 mg p.o. every day, adriamycin 10 mg i.v. on day 1 to 5, prednisolone 10 mg or 20 mg (20 mg was given on day 1 to 5) p.o. every day, and tamoxifen 20 mg p.o. every day. Adriamycin on day 1 to 5 was repeated three times every two weeks. After a total dose of 150 mg of adriamycin, the patients were changed to maintenance therapy consisting of cyclophosphamide 100 mg p.o., prednisolone 10 mg p.o. and tamoxifen 20 mg p.o. every day. After 72 months of the treatment there were 61 patients good for evaluation, 13 patients achieved a complete response (21.3%) with a median survival of 30.5 months and 18 patients had a partial response (29.5%) with a median survival of 21.0 months, and 30 patients failed to respond (49.2%) with a median survival of 8.5 months. There was a significant difference in survival time between responders (CR + PR) and non-responders (NC + PD) (p less than 0.001). Responses by site were seen in lung 10/18 (55.6%), liver 3/6 (50.0%), brain 2/4 (50.0%), bone 6/17 (35.3%) and soft tissue 14/24 (56.3%). A Satisfactory response for brain and liver metastasis, which are usually viewed as a sign of grim prognosis, was obtained similar to other sites of metastasis. Retreatment with CAPT, which was attempted in patients with secondary brain metastasis who responded to CAPT for initial brain metastasis, was uniformly effective. High ration of androgen to corticosteroid, positive estrogen receptors, long disease-free survival (over two years), premenopausal, high Broca' index (above 110) resulted from the chemo-endocrine therapy regimen CAPT. Toxicity was minimal and consisted of nausea,
vomiting
, alopecia and leucopenia.
...
PMID:[Combination chemo-endocrine therapy of metastatic and stage IV breast cancer with cyclophosphamide, adriamycin, prednisolone and tamoxifen (CAPT)--with special reference to management of brain and liver metastasis]. 291 92
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