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)

Ondansetron was compared with metoclopramide for antiemetic efficacy in a randomised double-blind trial in 122 patients with advanced breast cancer. All patients were treated with epirubicin (greater than 50 mg/m2) and cyclophosphamide (greater than 500 mg/m2). 50 patients receiving ondansetron and 60 with metoclopramide were considered evaluable. Ondansetron was at least as effective as metoclopramide in the control of vomiting and nausea. The percentage of patients with complete plus major control was 72% (59-85%) vs. 61% (48-74%) on day 1 (P = 0.230) and 79% (67-91%) vs. 66% (53-78%) on days 2-3 after chemotherapy (P = 0.122). Over the 3-day study period, nausea was absent or mild in 60% of the patients treated with ondansetron, compared to 45% given metoclopramide (P = 0.064). No major drug-related side-effects were reported. 1 patient receiving ondansetron experienced gastrointestinal disturbance and headache. Episodes of diarrhoea, fever, hyperkinetic syndrome, fatigue, restlessness and migraine with vomiting were reported by 5 patients treated with metoclopramide. None of the changes in the biochemical or haematological parameters was attributed to the antiemetic treatments.
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PMID:Double-blind randomised trial of the antiemetic efficacy and safety of ondansetron and metoclopramide in advanced breast cancer patients treated with epirubicin and cyclophosphamide. 183 24

Twenty-four patients with severe post-chemotherapy emesis (greater than 15 emetic episodes) refractory to prior combination antiemetic therapy were treated with a selective 5-HT3 receptor antagonist ondansetron (GR38032F). Ondansetron was given as 8 mg three times daily orally for 5 days with the first dose given 1 h prior to chemotherapy. Control of emesis was evaluated over the 5-day period. All chemotherapy was administered on an outpatient basis. Worst day analysis of antiemetic response was 87.5%: complete protection in 9/24 patients (37.5%) and major protection (1-2 emetic episodes) in 12/24 patients (50%). No protection from emesis was observed in 3 patients (12.5%). No side effects and no alterations in liver function tests were observed. Ondansetron is a safe and highly effective antiemetic agent.
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PMID:Control of refractory, chemotherapy-induced emesis with the serotonin antagonist ondansetron (GR38032F). 183 58

The efficacy of the serotonin antagonist ondansetron (GR 38032F) was evaluated in the prevention of nausea and vomiting induced by CMF chemotherapy in 29 breast cancer patients. At their first treatment course of CMF, all given IV on day 1 q 21 days, patients were given oral antiemetic treatment as follows: ondansetron 8 mg, 2 h prior to CMF, repeated after 5 and 10 h the day of chemotherapy and then 8 mg tds for a minimum of 3 days to a maximum of 5 days following chemotherapy. At first course of CMF, complete protection from emesis and nausea was observed in 86.2% and 62% of patients, respectively. At subsequent CMF courses with ondansetron, complete control of emesis was observed in 80% of patients. Side effects were mild and no dystonic reactions were observed. Ondansetron represents an effective, safe, and easily administered outpatient regimen. The addition of a corticosteroid to ondansetron could further improve control of CMF-induced emesis.
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PMID:Oral ondansetron (GR 38032F) for the control of CMF-induced emesis in the outpatient. 183 46

Ondansetron (GR 38032F), a 5-hydroxytryptamine-3 (5-HT3) receptor antagonist, is a highly effective and safe drug for the prophylaxis and treatment of emesis induced by various chemotherapy regimens in cancer patients. Recent studies have shown that ondansetron is also effective in post-anaesthesia and radiation-induced nausea and vomiting. When compared with high-dose metoclopramide, ondansetron appeared to be superior. Furthermore, ondansetron has been shown to improve stool consistency and to reduce stool frequency in patients with diarrhoea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome.
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PMID:Closing remarks. Ondansetron: effects on gastrointestinal motility. 183 38

Serotonin (5-Hydroxytryptamine) seems to play a dominant role in triggering vomiting induced by cytotoxic agents through the stimulation of 5-HT3 receptors. They have been observed in the GI tract as well as in the brain (area postrema). Ondansetron is a specific antagonist of 5-HT3 serotonin receptors. Its anti-emetic activity is very powerful in the ferret. The availability of an injectable or oral form of this product allows the overall treatment of acute and delayed emesis and its administration is in accordance with different schedules: single IV injection or a continuous 24 hour infusion or repeated IV injection followed by oral treatment. The pharmacokinetics of the drug are as follows: absorption begins about 30 minutes after the administration per os, its biodisponibility is about 60%, its clearance: 20 ml/minute and its elimination half life about 3 hours. Different double blind studies, carried out in parallel groups or in cross over, demonstrated the superiority of ondansetron over metoclopramide in the control of nausea and vomiting, whether or not the chemotherapy contained cisplatin; a more recent study shows also that ondansetron was superior to alizapride and methylprednisolone in combination. Side effects of ondansetron do not include extrapyramidal symptoms but only headaches and constipation. The use of ondansetron improves the well-being of patients receiving chemotherapy and increases protocol compliance.
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PMID:[Ondansetron: a specific 5-HT3 serotonin receptor inhibitor, a new antiemetic in oncology]. 183 90

Thirty four patients who were receiving carboplatin 400 mg/m2 for advanced epithelial ovarian cancer were treated with ondansetron antiemetic prophylaxis. Ondansetron was given as 4 mg oral +4 mg iv 30 minutes prior to carboplatin followed by 8 mg oral tds for 5 days. Of the evaluable patients complete or major control of emesis on day one was achieved in 94% of previously untreated patients and 81% of patients refractory to conventional antiemetic therapy. For the 5 day period as a whole 88% of untreated patients and 69% of those with refractory emesis reported complete or major control of nausea and vomiting. Fifteen patients noted no side effects with mild headache (30%) and constipation (21%) the most frequent problems in the remainder. Ondansetron is effective antiemetic prophylaxis for carboplatin chemotherapy and should allow the majority of these patients to be managed on an out-patient basis.
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PMID:A phase II study of ondansetron as antiemetic prophylaxis in patients receiving carboplatin for advanced ovarian cancer. The North Thames Ovary Group. 183 30

Ondansetron is a 5-hydroxytryptamine3 receptor antagonist for the treatment of chemotherapy- and radiotherapy-induced nausea and emesis. A sensitive, accurate, and precise HPLC method for the determination of ondansetron in plasma is described. Samples are prepared by solid-phase extraction and, after chromatography of the extracts on a silica analytical column, ondansetron is detected by UV absorbance at 305 nm. The method is sensitive down to 1 ng/mL, at which concentration the coefficient of variation was 6.2% in a single assay run. Repeated analyses of quality control samples, nominally at 2 ng/mL, were carried out over a number of assay runs with a coefficient of variation of 5.5%. The method is specific for ondansetron with respect to endogenous plasma components, identified phase I metabolites, and some co-administered chemotherapeutic drugs. In sustained use over several months, and in support of the clinical development of ondansetron, the method has been shown to be robust. An application of the assay in the investigation of the pharmacokinetics of ondansetron in the young and elderly is described.
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PMID:Determination of ondansetron in plasma and its pharmacokinetics in the young and elderly. 183 13

To compare ondansetron (GR 38032F), a 5-hydroxytryptamine3-receptor antagonist, with metoclopramide in the prophylaxis of acute cisplatin-induced emesis, we conducted a double-blind crossover study in 97 patients scheduled to receive cisplatin (80 to 100 mg per square meter of body-surface area) for treatment of cancer. None had received chemotherapy before this trial. Among the 76 patients who satisfactorily completed both parts of the study, complete or nearly complete control of emesis (i.e., no episodes of emesis occurred, or only one or two) was achieved in 57 of 76 treatments (75 percent) with ondansetron and in 32 of 76 treatments (42 percent) with metoclopramide (P less than 0.001). Ondansetron was also more effective in controlling acute nausea, as assessed with a visual-analogue scale (P = 0.019) or a graded scale (P = 0.024). There was a significant preference among patients for ondansetron (55 vs. 26 percent; P = 0.006). Dystonic reactions were observed during three treatments with metoclopramide; both agents were otherwise well tolerated. We conclude that ondansetron is more effective than metoclopramide in the control of cisplatin-induced nausea and vomiting, and that this suggests that serotonin is an important mediator of this side effect.
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PMID:Comparison of the 5-hydroxytryptamine3 (serotonin) antagonist ondansetron (GR 38032F) with high-dose metoclopramide in the control of cisplatin-induced emesis. 213 3

In a cross-over design of a study of prevention of emesis induced by cancer chemotherapy done in Saitama Cancer Center, the efficacy of oral lorazepam was superior to that of i.v. domperidone. And then, we proceeded a parallel study with use of oral lorazepam and oral domperidone. However, in this situation lorazepam was not superior to domperidone despite accrual of more than 60 patients. Recently, a multi-institutional study has been started in October of 1988 in an evaluation of the efficacy and safety of the new anti-emetic drug of a 5HT3 receptor antagonist, ondansetron. Two methods of its administration were designed. In one study ondansetron was given 2 hr prior to non-platinum chemotherapy as an 2 or 8 mg dose by oral administration, followed by receiving it 6 hr and 12 hr after chemotherapy. In another study, it was given 15 min prior to cisplatin including chemotherapy as an 2 or 8 mg loading dose by i.v. injection over 5 min, followed by continuous infusion at a rate of 0.25 mg/h or 1 mg/h for 24 h, respectively. Efficacy was assessed by measurement of the number of episodes of retching and vomiting occurring in the 24h after administration of chemotherapy and by an assessment of nausea during the same period. This time the major efficacy category was adopted, which is made up of the complete responder and major responder categories of both vomiting and nausea. 19 patients were evaluable for efficacy in the non-platinum group; the major efficacy rates showed 45% in 2 mg-given group and 88% in 8 mg-given group, respectively. 108 patients were evaluable for efficacy in the cisplatin group: the major efficacy rates showed more than 70% in both 2 mg and 8 mg-given group. However, in the patients given more than 75 mg/mg2 of cisplatin, the major efficacy rates were 55% in the 2 mg-given group, compared to 73% in the 8 mg-given group. Ondansetron was well tolerated, with no significant drug-related adverse events.
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PMID:[Gastrointestinal toxicity induced by anticancer drugs--including new antiemetic drugs]. 214 Apr 98

Seventy-five breast cancer patients scheduled to receive a first course (in a new cycle) of cyclophosphamide, fluorouracil, and doxorubicin (FAC) or epirubicin (FEC) participated in a double-blind crossover study to compare the antiemetic efficacy and safety of ondansetron (GR38032), a 5-hydroxytryptamine3 (5-HT3) receptor antagonist, and metoclopramide. Ondansetron was given as an 8 mg loading dose (4 mg intravenously [IV] plus 4 mg orally) before chemotherapy followed by 8 mg every 8 hours orally for 3 to 5 days. Metoclopramide was given as an 80 mg loading dose (60 mg IV plus 20 mg orally) before chemotherapy followed by 20 mg every 8 hours orally for 3 to 5 days. A "period" interaction in the analysis of emetic response in the first 24 hours necessitated a parallel group analysis of first treatments only, 68 patients being assessable for this parameter. In the first 24 hours, complete or major control (zero to two emetic episodes) of emesis was achieved in 30 of 35 (86%) patients receiving ondansetron and in 14 of 33 (42%) patients receiving metoclopramide (P less than .001). Ondansetron was also more effective in reducing acute nausea. On days 2 to 3, the complete or major responses were significantly better with ondansetron (81% v 65%; P = .033), but there was no statistical difference in the control of nausea. There was a significant patient preference for ondansetron (63% v 26%; P = .001). Extrapyramidal reactions were observed in two metoclopramide treatments; both treatments were otherwise well tolerated. These results are consistent with serotonin (5-HT), being a significant neurotransmitter of cyclophosphamide/doxorubicin- or epirubicin/fluorouracil-induced emesis.
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PMID:A randomized double-blind comparison of ondansetron and metoclopramide in the prophylaxis of emesis induced by cyclophosphamide, fluorouracil, and doxorubicin or epirubicin chemotherapy. 214 Aug 54


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