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

Combination chemotherapy with methotrexate, etoposide, adriamycin and cisplatin (M-EAP regimen) was administered to 4 patients with advanced epithelial cancer of the urinary tract (Methotrexate 30 mg/M2 day 1, 15 and 22; Etoposide 100 mg/M2 day 1, 2, 15 and 22; Adriamycin 30 mg/M2 day 2; Cisplatin 70 mg/M2 day 2, every 4 weeks). In an attempt to improve the anti-cancer effect of the M-VAC regimen, etoposide was substituted for vinblastine. This series comprised 3 males and 1 female ranging in age from 54 to 68 years (mean age: 63), with a performance status of 1 to 2. The site of the primary lesion was bladder in 3, and left ureter in 1. The clinical response was assessed in 3 of the 4 patients: one achieved complete response and two had partial response. Two of the four died of disease 5 months after chemotherapy. Two of them have been alive for 10 and 8 months with no evidence of disease after chemotherapy. Toxicity included moderate or severe myelosuppression in two patients, and mild to moderate anorexia, vomiting, alopecia, and hiccups in all patients. These preliminary results suggest that the M-EAP regimen is effective against advanced epithelial carcinoma of the urinary tract. However, myelosuppression was a dose-limiting factor.
...
PMID:[Combination chemotherapy of methotrexate, etoposide, adriamycin and cisplatin (M-EAP) for advanced urothelial cancer]. 192 67

Fifteen patients aged over 65 years of age with advanced non-small-cl lung cancer (mean age = 70.7, stage IIIb: IV = 4:11) were treated with combination chemotherapy consisting of Cisplatin (50 or 80 mg/m2) and a vinca-alkaloid (Vindesine 3 mg/m2 or Etoposide 80 mg/m2). The effectiveness and side effects of this cisplatin therapy in different combinations of vinca-alkaloid regimens (Vindesine vs Etoposide) were examined. The mean dose of Cisplatin in the Etoposide combination group (75.2 mg/m2) was significantly higher than that in the Vindesine combination group (54.3 mg/m2) (p less than 0.01). A notable reduction the tumor size was observed in 25% of the Etoposide group, only. The 6-month survival rate and one-year survival rate were respectively 85.7%, 57.1% in the Vindesine + Cisplatin group, and 87.5%, 50% in the Etoposide + Cisplatin group. The common side effects were nausea, vomiting, anorexia, and alopecia. These symptoms were either alleviated by antiemetic drugs or followed by spontaneous recovery. Leucopenia, anemia and thrombocytopenia were found in both groups, and there was no difference in the time course of myelosuppression between the two groups. The extent of nephrotoxicity was assessed by creatinine clearance rate. Its decrease in the Vindesine group (60.1----38.9 ml/min) was higher than that in the Etoposide group (64.9----48.9 ml/min), while there was no significant change in BUN, serum creatinine and urine NAG between the two groups. There were no cases in which chemotherapy schedules had to be interrupted due to myelosuppression and nephrotoxicity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Cisplatin and vinca alkaloid combination chemotherapy of advanced non-small-cell lung cancer in the aged]. 196 86

Eighteen patients with progressive/locally recurrent cancer of the stomach were given therapy with MMC, ADM, CDDP, Etoposide (VP-16), and 5'DFUR (MAC-VD therapy). Drugs were administered intravenously with MMC 10 mg/m2, ADM 20 mg/m2, and CDDP 50 mg/m2 on day 1; orally with etoposide 100 mg/day for five consecutive days from day 3; and orally with 5'DFUR 600 mg/day for three weeks from day 3 followed by discontinuation for one subsequent week. This drug regimen was one course of the treatment and repeated as far as possible. There were 16 evaluable cases; the sex distribution was ten males and six females. Patients ranged in age from 43 to 78 years. P.S. 1 was two cases; 2 ten cases; and 3 four cases. The overall response rate, CR + PR, was 1 + 7/16 (50%), while this rate for primary disease was 2 + 5/16 (43.8%). Of the two CR cases, one primary lesion became operable and CR was demonstrated histologically. The overall response rates, CR + PR, for metastatic lesions were 1 + 3/9 (44.4%) for the liver; 0 + 1/4 (25.0%) for the abdominal lymph nodes; 0 + 1/2 (50.0%) for the superficial lymph nodes; 0 + 1/2 (50.0%) for the bones; and 0 + 1/1 (100%) for the lung. The median duration of the response was 3.7 months (range between 1.5 and 8.2+) and the median duration of survival 5.1+ months (range between 2.2+ and 13.3+). At the same time, the hematological side effects of both leukocytopenia and hypohemoglobinemia were seen in 43.8% of the cases. Non-hematological side effects included alopecia in 18.8% and nausea/vomiting in 12.5%. There was no case of discontinuation due to side effects. It was concluded that the therapy with MMC, ADM, CDDP, etoposide and 5'DFUR (MAC-VD therapy) proved to be a very promising drug regimen in the treatment of stomach cancer with high rates of response and is expected to be a step forward in the establishment of interdisciplinary treatment.
...
PMID:[A study of combined chemotherapy with MMC, ADM, CDDP, etoposide (VP-16), 5'DFUR (MAC-VD therapy) in advanced cancer and local relapse of the stomach]. 213 4

Following the identification of a synergistic antitumor effect in a murine model, the combination of etoposide and vincristine has been explored in the clinic. Etoposide was given at 4 dose levels (250, 500, 750 or 1,000 mg/m2) with each dose given in 3 equal fractions daily for 3 days. The dose of vincristine was fixed (two 0.75 mg infusions over 22 hours each between doses of etoposide). A total of 26 patients were entered into study and 7, 11, 10 and 5 patients were treated at the 250, 500, 750, and 1,000 mg/m2 dose levels, respectively. Myelosuppression was the principle side effect and Grade 4 WBC toxicity (less than 1,000/mm3) developed in 14%, 27%, 40% and 40%, respectively, of the patients treated at each of these respective dose levels. Life-threatening infections occurred in 0%, 9%, 30% and 60% of the patients at these levels, respectively. Reversal of marrow toxicity was rapid with repeat courses given at 3-week intervals. Non-hematologic toxicity, including neurotoxicity, nausea, vomiting, and mucositis was generally mild when present. Objective responses were observed in 1 patient each with refractory Hodgkin's disease and immunoblastic lymphoma. Prolonged periods of stable disease occurred in 2 patients with adenocarcinoma of the lung and one patient with Hodgkin's disease. The starting dose of etoposide recommended for further trials of this agent in combination with infusion of vincristine is 500 mg/m2 given in fractionated doses; dose escalation should be possible in many patients.
...
PMID:Combination high-dose etoposide and vincristine infusion. 238 18

Ten patients treated with combination chemotherapy regimen containing Cisplatin, Bleomycin and Etoposide (PEB) were submitted to Holter monitoring during the first cycle of treatment. No modifications of heart rate, ST-T segment were observed and only a slight increase of incidence of sopraventricular ectopic beats was recorded. One patient developed a transient second degree atrio-ventricular block in the first day during episodes of vomiting. These data suggest that combination chemotherapy with PEB, at least during the first cycle of treatment, has no significant arrhythmogenic effect.
...
PMID:Detection of cardiac arrhythmias and ischaemic events in combination chemotherapy with cisplatin, etoposide and bleomycin for testicular cancer. 247 52

It is very common for intraarterial infusion therapy of some anticancer agent to be effective against hepatocellular carcinoma. In this case, the patient was a 74-year-old man who suffered from very advanced hepatocellular carcinoma with tumor thrombus of the intrahepatic portal vein and IVC. He was treated with intraarterial infusion of CDDP, Etoposide, 5-FU, through a catheter placed in the proper hepatic artery. CDDP (30 mg/day) and Etoposide (60 mg/day) were given once every 5 days, and then 5-FU(250 mg/day) was infused daily for 26 days. The patient underwent this protocol study twice in 3 months. After the intraarterial infusion, transarterial embolization using CDDP (100 mg) powder added to lipiodol and aluminum stearate as suspension was done a month later. The tumor regression rate was 84% after intraarterial infusion of CDDP, Etoposide and 5-FU. The tumor thrombus in the intrahepatic portal vein and IVC had completely disappeared. We could not find lipiodol accumulated in the tumor after TAE. Thus, we assumed that the remaining tumor was a necrotic scar and that a complete response was obtained in the patient. There were some side effects, such as nausea, vomiting, pancytopenia and gastritis but no severe complication occurred.
...
PMID:[A case of hepatocellular carcinoma effectively treated by intraarterial infusion of CDDP and other agents]. 255 Dec 53

Survival of patients who have clinical stage IIIM0 non-small cell bronchogenic carcinoma remains relatively short despite treatment with either surgery or radiation. Results from a phase II study of simultaneous continuous infusion of 5-fluorouracil, cisplatin, and split-course radiation with or without surgery indicate that median survival duration in patients treated with this combined modality approach may be better than the median survival for patients treated with radiation alone. Etoposide has been added to this regimen, and 32 stage IIIM0 non-small cell lung cancer patients have been treated with the 3-drug regimen resulting in a 73% clinical partial remission rate. No residual tumor was found in 6 of 12 patients who had pulmonary resection after 4 courses of chemotherapy and radiation. The sites of failure in 8 patients with recurrent disease are as follows: local only, 3; distant only, 4; and local and distant, 1. The major toxicities have been leukopenia, nausea, and vomiting. The median leukocyte nadir was 2,400/mm3. A leukocyte count less than 1,000/mm3 was observed in 2 patients (7%), 1 of whom died of progressive pneumonia. All patients experienced nausea, vomiting, and anorexia. Severe esophagitis, dermatitis, and pneumonitis were not observed. Survival analysis has not been done because median follow-up time (326 days) is relatively short.
...
PMID:Phase II trial of therapy with etoposide, 5-fluorouracil by continuous infusion, cisplatin, and simultaneous split-course radiation in stage III non-small cell bronchogenic carcinoma. 283 68

136 patients with previously untreated stage III or IV squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck entered a prospective randomized trial to compare the efficacy and toxicity of DDP vs DDP-VP 16 213 (Etoposide). 69 patients (group A) were given three courses of DDP 100 mg/m2 administered on day 1, while 67 patients (group B) were given three courses of a combination of Etoposide 100 mg/m2 per os administered on days 1 to 5 and DDP 100 mg/m2 on day 4. Objective response rate appeared to be low in both groups: in group A (60 evaluated patients) CR = 1, PR = 9; CR + PR = 14.5%, and in group B (57 evaluated patients) CR = 3, PR = 8; CR + PR = 16.4% (p greater than 0.4). One drug-related death occurred in each group. There was no difference in toxicity between the two treatments with regard to leukopenia, thrombopenia, vomiting and nephrotoxicity. Thus this schedule of oral Etoposide does not seem to increase either the efficacy or the toxicity of DDP.
...
PMID:A phase III of cisplatinum versus cisplatinum-etoposide for previously untreated squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck. 330 1

Etoposide (VP-16) is a semisynthetic epipodophyllotoxin that exhibits cell cycle phase specific cytotoxicity and enhanced effectiveness with increasing duration of drug exposure. We have therefore conducted a Phase I trial to determine the side effects, tolerable doses, and pharmacokinetic parameters of VP-16 given by continuous i.v. infusion to patients with advanced cancer. Eighteen patients were treated with varying dosages of VP-16 infused continuously for 72 consecutive hours every 28 days. Using this schedule, the maximally tolerated dosage of VP-16 was 150 mg/m2/day for patients with good performance status and 125 mg/m2/day for more debilitated cancer patients. Hematological toxicity was dose limiting with median granulocyte and platelet nadirs of 700/mm3 and 116,000/mm3, respectively, at a dose of 150 mg/m2/day. Other toxicities included only mild nausea, vomiting, and alopecia. Plasma and urine VP-16 concentrations were determined using a high-performance liquid chromatography assay. At a VP-16 dosage of 150 mg/m2/day, steady-state VP-16 concentrations were in the range of 2.1 to 7.0 micrograms/ml in all patients. Further pharmacokinetic analysis revealed that the plasma clearance of VP-16 was consistently near 25 ml/min/m2 (independent of dosage) and that renal clearance accounted for only 15% of VP-16 total plasma clearance. Patient age was found to be the most important factor correlating with plasma clearance of VP-16. Linear regression analysis also revealed that both the plasma VP-16 concentration at steady state and the concentration of VP-16 in plasma at 24 h from the start of the infusion correlated with hematological toxicity; no other patient characteristics correlated with hematological toxicity. The recommended VP-16 dose for Phase II trials of 72-h continuous infusion VP-16 is 150 mg/m2/day in patients with good performance status.
...
PMID:Phase I clinical and pharmacological study of 72-hour continuous infusion of etoposide in patients with advanced cancer. 381 83

Phase II study of Etoposide administered intravenously and orally was performed in 163 patients with urologic malignancies for the clinical evaluation of responses and adverse effects. The eligibility of the patients and evaluation of the responses were carried out according to the general criteria proposed by Koyama and Saito. Out of the 163 patients registered in the study, it was possible to evaluate 141. In the cases of intravenous administration, the response rates were 16.7% in testicular cancer mostly refractory to prior therapy, 15.6% in bladder cancer, 7.7% in prostatic cancer, and 0% in renal cell route. The overall response rate was 11.1%. Toxicities were noted in the gastrointestinal tract, the rates being 54.4% for anorexia, 35.4% for nausea and 17.7% for vomiting. Alopecia was observed at a high incidence of 72.1%. Myelosuppression leukopenia and thrombocytopenia were the other prominent adverse effects.
...
PMID:[Collaborative phase II study of etoposide (NK-171). Urological Cooperative Study Group of etoposide (NK-171)]. 404 Sep 86


1 2 3 Next >>