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)

Homoharringtonine (HHT) is one of several cephalotaxine alkaloids that has shown clinical efficacy in patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). In a phase I trial we evaluated cytarabine 100 mg/m2 by continuous infusion daily for 7 days in combination with four dose levels of HHT ranging from 1.5-5 mg/m2 by continuous infusion daily for 7 days to see if an effective regimen could be developed. Twenty-two patients with relapsed and/or primary refractory AML were treated. Seventeen males and five females were treated, with a median age of 40 years (range 19-63). There were five remissions in 14 patients with relapsed AML and none of eight responders in patients with primary refractory AML. None of the three patients treated at 1.5 mg/m2 dose level of HHT responded. Of three patients treated at the 3 mg/m2 dose level, there was one complete remission. At both 4 mg/m2 and 5 mg/m2, two of eight patients achieved complete remission. Four of the five remissions occurred in patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia. Drug induced pancytopenia was universal, and hypotension and fluid retention were more common at the higher dose levels. Other toxicity was mild and included nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and mucositis. No significant hepatic, renal, or cardiac toxicity was seen. We conclude that the dose of HHT 4 mg/m2 for 7 days by continuous infusion in combination with cytarabine is safe for patients with AML; and this combination is appropriate for a phase II evaluation.
Leukemia 1992 Nov
PMID:Homoharringtonine in combination with cytarabine for patients with acute myelogenous leukemia. 143 3

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.
Leukemia 1992 Aug
PMID:Continuous-infusion daunorubicin and carboplatin for high-risk acute myeloid leukemia in the elderly. 164 Jul 28

One-hundred, twenty-eight patients with Hodgkin's disease in remission or who had failed a mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine and prednisone (MOPP), a doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine and dacarbazine (ABVD) and/or lomustine, etoposide and prednimustine (CEP) regimens have been treated with a high-dose therapy (HDT) containing cyclophosphamide, etoposide, carmustine (CVB) and autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT). Forty patients were treated while they were in resistant or progressive disease states using alternating MOPP/ABVD protocol; 15 patients received ABMT in first relapse; 51 patients had a complete remission (CR) with first-line therapy but later relapsed and then received conventional salvage therapy; 16 achieved no response or progression ("resistant relapse" patients) and 35 responded partially or completely ("sensitive-relapse" patients). The other 22 patients received ABMT in remission. Following HDT, 56 patients (52.8%) achieved CR and 23 patients (21.6%) achieved a partial remission for an overall response rate of 74.4%. Sixteen patients failed to respond and died in progressive disease 1 to 10 months (median 6 months) after ABMT. High-dose therapy produced severe toxicity including vomiting (100%), mucositis (75%) and liver enzymes and alkaline phosphatase elevations (51%). There were 10 treatment-related deaths. A multivariate analysis identified poor performance status and resistant-relapse patients as very important adverse risk factors for survival immediately after ABMT. These results, while validating this procedure for inducing remissions in advanced highly-treated patients, at the same time confirm the need of employing this approach in first relapse or in second complete remission after standard therapy and before ABMT or, in first complete remission in very high risk Hodgkin's disease patients. Our experience in 15 very poor prognosis Hodgkin's disease patients transplanted in first CR demonstrated to be much significant.
Leukemia 1991
PMID:Nine years' experience with ABMT in 128 patients with Hodgkin's disease: an Italian study group report. 189 Aug 70

Thirty two patients with refractory or recurrent acute leukemia or blast crisis of chronic myelocytic leukemia were treated with 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine (Ara-C), 100 mg/m2 [group I (n = 15)] or 200 mg/m2 [group II (n = 18)], and tetrahydrouridine (THU) 350 mg/m2, given concurrently as a 3 h continuous intravenous infusion at 12 h interval for eight doses. Two of 13 (15.3%) evaluable patients in group I achieved a complete response, both of whom had acute myelocytic leukemia. In group II, seven of 14 evaluable patients (50%) obtained objective responses--six with complete responses (42.8%) and one with partial response (7%). Myelosuppression was seen in all patients with a median duration of 32.5 days (group I) and 36.3 days (group II), respectively. Non-hematologic toxicity consisted of nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, conjunctivitis, skin rash, hepatocellular toxicity, hemorrhage, and renal toxicity. Pharmacokinetic studies revealed, for group I, mean peak plasma Ara-C levels at 3 h (Cp3h) of 1254 ng/ml, area under the curve (AUC) 4651 ng x h/ml, total body clearance (TBC) 32.65 l/h/m2, renal clearance (RC) 7.04 l/h/m2 with a mean of 12.36% of the injected amount of Ara-C excreted unchanged in urine over the first 24 h. The corresponding mean values for group II are Cp3h 3305 ng/ml, AUC 15080 ng x h/ml, TBC 20.48 l/h/m2, RC 7.02 l/h/m2 and 26.23%. Ara-C 200 mg/m2 combined with THU gave serum Ara-C levels and response rates comparable to those achieved with high dose Ara-C (HiDAC) (greater than or equal to 1 g/m2). Central nervous system toxicity associated with HiDAC was not seen. Pharmacokinetics for uracil arabinoside (Ara-U) in patients treated with Ara-C 200 mg/m2 plus THU, were comparable to values seen with Ara-C for Cp3h, AUC and 24 h urine, amounting to 3160 ng/ml, 21717 ng x h/ml and 23.62% whereas TBC was significantly lower (p less than 0.001) for Ara-U than for Ara-C (3.02 versus 20.48 l/h/m2).
Leukemia 1991 Nov
PMID:Therapy of refractory/relapsed acute leukemia with cytosine arabinoside plus tetrahydrouridine (an inhibitor of cytidine deaminase)--a pilot study. 196 Oct 42

As part of a broad phase I study of recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rh GM-CSF), four patients were treated who had myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) with excess blasts. The GM-CSF was given daily as an intravenous injection over a period of 30 min for 5 days. A total of 11 cycles were conducted. Each patient received at least two different dose levels. In three patients, three different dosages were delivered. The treatment course was interrupted by a 10-day rest period. Rh GM-CSF was well tolerated, with only minor side effects seen, which included bone discomfort at the lower back, sternum and ribs, and constitutional symptoms such as low grade fever, nausea/vomiting, and mild myalgias. Whereas no increases in platelet and reticulocyte counts were recorded, elevations of absolute neutrophil counts above 100 cells/microliters occurred in all patients. The most striking finding was, however, the development of increases in the number of circulating and bone marrow blast counts that were observed particularly when doses of greater than or equal to 500 micrograms/m2 of body surface area were administered. In line with data demonstrating in vitro induction of proliferation of leukemic blast cells by rh GM-CSF, one may take advantage of blastogenesis induced in vivo that may favor the use of a therapeutic strategy by recruiting quiescent cells into the mitotic cycle which would then represent optimum targets for a subsequent cycle-specific cytotoxic chemotherapy. Such an approach could form the basis for new clinical trials in MDS.
Leukemia 1989 May
PMID:Effect of recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor in patients with myelodysplastic syndrome with excess blasts. 265 95

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.
Leukemia 1993 May
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

Ninety-seven patients with refractory or relapsed acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), median age 37 years, received as salvage therapy a single course of idarubicin 6 mg/m2 as an intravenous (i.v.) bolus daily for 5 days, cytarabine (Ara-C) 600 mg/m2 i.v. for a period of 2 hours daily for 5 days and etoposide (VP-16) 150 mg/m2 for a period of 2 hours daily for 3 days (ICE protocol). Thirty-six patients were primarily resistant to standard inductive therapy with daunorubicin and Ara-C; 50 patients were in first relapse, three patients in second or third relapse, and eight patients in relapse after transplants. Forty-two (43%) out of 97 patients achieved complete remission, 11 patients died of infection or hemorrhage during induction, and 44 patients (45%) had resistant disease. Of the various variables examined, only disease status (i.e. refractory versus relapsed AML) was predictive for a significantly lower response rate. The median remission duration was 16 weeks; the overall median survival was 10 weeks. Nausea, vomiting, and oral mucositis were common but were rarely severe. No patient experienced treatment-related cardiac toxicity. In conclusion, the ICE protocol is a tolerable regimen providing effective antileukemic activity in patients with advanced AML. The evolution of this protocol in previously untreated patients with AML appears indicated.
Leukemia 1993 Feb
PMID:Idarubicin in combination with intermediate-dose cytarabine and VP-16 in the treatment of refractory or rapidly relapsed patients with acute myeloid leukemia. The GIMEMA Cooperative Group. 842 73

Recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), given intravenously 5 micrograms/kg per day, was administered on days 4-8 of timed-sequential chemotherapy (TSC) with mitoxantrone, 12 mg/m2 per day on days 1-3, etoposide, 200 mg/m2 per day on days 8-10 and cytarabine, 500 mg/m2 per day on days 1-3 and 8-10, in 22 patients aged < 60 years with refractory acute myelogenous leukemia in an attempt to increase recruitment of leukemic cells in S phase before the second sequence of TSC. Thirty-eight patients treated with TSC without GM-CSF in a previous trial served as historical controls. In GM-CSF-treated patients, median duration of neutropenia < 0.5 x 10(9)/1 was 33 days and of platelet transfusion requirement 30 days, without any increase by comparison with controls. WHO grade 3 or more extra-hematologic toxicity included sepsis in 60% of patients, vomiting in 30%, diarrhea in 15%, hyper-bilirubinemia in 15%, and mucositis in 10%, without any difference with controls. Among 20 evaluable patients six individuals (30%), with a 95% confidence interval (CI) ranging from 12-54% achieved complete remission, 11 (55%, CI 31-77%) did not respond to therapy and three (15%, CI 3-38%) died from infection. There was no demonstrable in vivo proliferation of leukemic cells during the 5 days of administration of GM-CSF. The average percentage of bone marrow cells in S phase in five patients was 4.0 +/- 2.8 on day 4 and 7.0 +/- 7.2 on day 8 (p = NS). In this cohort of patients refractory to cytarabine, addition of GM-CSF did not increase efficacy of TSC by comparison with historical controls.
Leukemia 1993 Mar
PMID:Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor in association to timed-sequential chemotherapy with mitoxantrone, etoposide, and cytarabine for refractory acute myelogenous leukemia. 844 42

Paclitaxel (Taxol; Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Princeton, NJ) is an effective drug in the treatment of metastatic breast cancer (MBC). In the salvage setting, 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and folinic acid have proved to be effective against MBC as well. Recent preclinical data suggest that paclitaxel plus 5-FU has additive cytotoxicity. Given these observations, we initiated a phase II trial in which 38 women with MBC have been treated with a combination of all three drugs. All patients are currently evaluable for toxicity and 34 are evaluable for response. All women had histologically proven and assessable disease. Patients with prior exposure to paclitaxel were ineligible. Patient characteristics include a median age of 51 years (age range, 31 to 73 years) and a median performance status of 1 (range, 0 to 2). Thirty-three patients have received prior chemotherapy, of whom 23 had adjuvant chemotherapy only. Fifty-eight percent of the patients (22 of 38) had received prior doxorubicin or mitoxantrone; four patients had only hormonal therapy. Four patients had bone-only disease, and three patients had lymphangitic spread or cytologically positive pleural effusion as the only evaluable disease. Treatment consisted of paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 over 3 hours (day 1 only), followed by folinic acid 300 mg over 1 hour, followed by 5-FU 350 mg/m2 on days 1 to 3. Patients received standard paclitaxel premedications. To date, 175 cycles have been administered (median cycle length, 29 days; median number of cycles per patient, five). Toxicities included grade 3/4 infections in nine cycles (5%), grade 3/4 mucositis in three cycles, grade 3/4 nausea/vomiting in three cycles, grade 1 paresthesias in 12 patients (32%), alopecia 100%, and 17 cycles (10%) associated with dose reduction. Based on Cancer and Leukemia Group B toxicity criteria, arthralgia/myalgias were modest and graded mild (32 cycles), moderate (nine cycles), or severe (two cycles). There were two major hypersensitivity reactions, prompting removal of those patients from further protocol treatment. Four patients are unassessable for response due to hypersensitivity reactions (two) and unevaluable disease (two). Among the 34 patients evaluable for response, there were three complete responses, 18 partial responses, one minor response, nine stable disease, and three progressive disease (response rate, 62%). Responses were seen in patients who had received prior doxorubicin or mitoxantrone (11 of 22 patients) and in anthracycline/naive patients (10 of 16 patients). Responses were observed in all metastatic sites: soft tissue, viscera, and bone. Paclitaxel/5-FU/folinic acid appears to be an effective and well-tolerated outpatient regimen for women with MBC, even after failure of anthracycline-containing therapy.
...
PMID:Paclitaxel and 5-fluorouracil in metastatic breast cancer: the US experience. 862 38

THP-COPBLM including pirarubicin (THP), which is thought to be less toxic than doxorubicin, was used to treat non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) and the remission rate and adverse effects were studied in 26 patients older than 70 years. Complete remission (CR) was achieved in 19 patients (73.1%) and partial remission in three (11.5%). Classified by stages, CR was achieved in seven out of nine stage II patients and 12 out of 17 stage III, IV patients. The 2-year survival rate was 60.3%. Grade 3 or higher adverse effects included leukopenia in eight patients (30.8%), anemia in three (11.5%), thrombocytopenia in two (7.7%) and nausea/vomiting in 1 (3.8%). The THP-COPBLM regimen appears useful for the treatment of NHL in elderly patients. The regimen was seldom associated with gastrointestinal symptoms and cardiotoxicity. Despite the administration of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), however, the white blood cell count decreased in many patients, suggesting the necessity for further study of this regimen to modify the dose of THP.
Leukemia 1997 Nov
PMID:THP-COPBLM (pirarubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisone, bleomycin and procarbazine) regimen combined with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in elderly patients: a prospective study. 936 12


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