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Query: UMLS:C0085593 (
chills
)
4,268
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A phase I study of a recombinant gamma
interferon
(S-6810) was conducted in a cooperative study involving 11 institutions. S-6810 was administered at doses of 2, 4, 8, 12, 32 and 64 X 10(6) U/m2 by one-hour infusion for 5 consecutive days. A total of 40 courses were administered to 31 patients. High fever exceeding 38 degrees C with
chills
occurred in about 80% of patients. The incidences of other toxicities were fatigue in 50%, gastrointestinal toxicities in 30-40%, and changes in hepatic enzymes and hematologic toxicities in 20-30%. Dose-limiting factors were judged to be hypotension, leukopenia and central nervous toxicity. Maximum tolerated dose was 64 X 10(6) U/m2 and an optimal dose for phase II study was considered to be 6 X 10(6) U/m2 by daily chronic schedule. Blood concentration was highest at the end of infusion, and then decreased rapidly with a biphasic curve. The peak concentrations were elevated by escalation of doses. A partial response was observed in a patient with mycosis fungoides.
...
PMID:[Phase I study of a recombinant gamma interferon (S-6810)]. 310 8
Thirteen patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma were entered on a Phase I/II trial of recombinant gamma-
interferon
(gamma-IFN). Patients (3) were entered on escalating dose levels, and each patient was escalated to the next dose until an individual maximum tolerated treatment dose (MTD) was established. Multiple parameters of biologic response were measured. Patients were studied twice baseline and at frequent intervals after the initial treatment and every treatment until the patient's individual MTD was reached. The MTD for most patients was less than 75 X 10(6) U/m2. Small, but statistically significant, enhancement of monocyte antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity and mononuclear cell inhibition of MBL-2 growth were noted in vitro at gamma-IFN concentrations greater than 250 U/ml. Clinically obvious biologic effects were observed: fever,
chills
, hypotension, and malaise. However, laboratory assays of peripheral blood mononuclear cell natural killer cell activity, tumor (MBL-2) growth inhibition, antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, lymphoblastic T-cell subsets, and 2'5'-oligonucleotide synthetase were not altered in vivo.
...
PMID:Phase I/II trial of recombinant gamma-interferon in patients with renal cell carcinoma: immunologic and biologic effects. 311 Mar 79
Thirty patients with documented metastatic melanoma were randomly assigned to receive recombinant DNA-produced gamma-
interferon
(specific activity approximately, 20 MU/mg) intravenously (IV) over either two or 24 hours at dosages of 3, 30, 300, 1,000, or 3,000 micrograms/m2. Objective toxicity resembled that of alpha-
interferon
and included fever,
chills
, myalgias, headache, and fatigue. Neutropenia, elevations in liver enzymes, tachyarrhythmias, and CNS changes also were noted. Dose-limiting toxicity included neutropenia, liver enzyme abnormality, constitutional symptoms, and a change in mental status. The incidence of toxicity was qualitatively similar in both two- and 24-hour treatment arms, but was quantitatively more severe in the 24-hour continuous infusion arm. Maximum tolerated dose was 1,000 micrograms/m2 in both schedules. Pharmacokinetic studies showed a half-life of six to nine hours. One patient had a complete response after two cycles of therapy and an additional patient entered partial remission after three cycles. Recombinant gamma-
interferon
(rIRN-gamma) is tolerated at dosages of 1,000 micrograms/m2 administered daily either by two or 24 hour infusion for 14 days in patients with metastatic melanoma. The responses documented in this early trial warrant further evaluation for the treatment of metastatic melanoma.
...
PMID:A randomized phase I/II study of continuous versus intermittent intravenous interferon gamma in patients with metastatic melanoma. 311 86
A phase I and a phase II study of recombinant gamma-
interferon
(S 6810) were conducted on a cooperative basis involving 11 and 57 institutions, respectively. In the phase I study, a total of 40 courses were administered to 31 patients. High fever exceeding 38 degrees C with
chills
was observed in approximately 80%. Other toxicities were fatigue (50%), gastrointestinal symptoms (30-40%), changes in hepatic enzymes, and hematological toxicities (20-30%). Dose-limiting factors were judged to be hypotension, leucopenia and CNS toxicity. Since the optimal dose for the phase II study was considered to be 5 X 10(6) U/m2 by daily chronic schedule, a further study was conducted using this dose. Response rates were as follows: 14.3% (renal cell cancer), 11.8% (multiple myeloma) 40.0% (chronic lymphocytic leukemia), 16.7% (non-Hodgkin lymphoma), and 67% (mycosis fungoides). Complete response was obtained in one case each of renal cell cancer, malignant lymphoma and mycosis fungoides. Moreover, intermittent high-dose gamma-
interferon
against renal cell cancer induced a response rate of 21.4%, significantly higher than the 8.6% obtained by continuous administration. Local injection against cutaneous malignancies resulted in a 55.3% response rate. Anti-viral effect against herpes zoster infection was also preliminarily evaluated. Among 4 cases, 3 responded subjectively well to local injection of gamma-
interferon
, which is a hopeful result, although a randomized trial is still needed.
...
PMID:[Gamma interferon therapy of cancer patients]. 313 83
We report a Phase I study in 39 cancer patients of the tolerance and biologic activity of 47 intravenous (i.v.), intramuscular (i.m.), and subcutaneous (s.c.) treatments with recombinant methional gamma
interferon
(IFN-gamma 4A) which most closely resembles the natural material produced by T lymphocytes. Patients were treated with IFN-gamma 4A 5 days a week for 2 weeks. After a 2-week rest period, patients were placed on the same dose of drug three times a week. The most common side effects--fever,
chills
, malaise, myalgias, and nausea and vomiting--were seen with all routes of administration. Reversible increases in hepatic transaminase and decrease in granulocytes counts were seen. The dose-limiting toxicities observed were malaise and orthostatic hypotension. The maximum tolerated dose was 500-1,000 micrograms/M2/day. The t1/2 of IFN-gamma 4A in the circulation was 20 min after i.v. injection. No blood levels were detected after i.m. or s.c. injection. Antibody against IFN-gamma 4A increased in three patients. A complete response was observed in one patient with pulmonary metastases from renal cell carcinoma.
...
PMID:A phase I trial of recombinant human gamma interferon (IFN-gamma 4A) in patients with advanced malignancy. 313 13
24 patients with advanced, histologically proven cancer were treated with difluoromethylornithine 2.25 g/m2 orally every 6 h for the first 7 days of each 4-week treatment cycle. These patients also received daily i.m. doses of recombinant human alpha 2a-
interferon
(
IFN
) on Days 3 through 7 of each cycle.
IFN
doses of 3, 6, 12, 24, 36, and 48 X 10(6) units/m2 have been studied utilizing three patients at each daily dose level. Three additional patients have been observed at each of the two highest doses for better toxicity definition. This combination produced slight transient declines in leukocyte and platelet counts and transient rises in serum aspartate aminotransferase; however, these changes were no more pronounced at the higher
IFN
doses than at daily doses of 6 X 10(6) units/m2. Mild nausea and vomiting occurred in most patients and mild diarrhea also was common at all
IFN
dose levels.
Chills
, fever, myalgia, lethargy and fatigue, and anorexia were also observed at all
IFN
doses; however, lethargy and fatigue (lassitude) seemed to be the major factor which limited patient tolerance of
IFN
to 48 X 10(6) units/m2 daily. No ototoxicity was identified clinically or audiometrically and no life-threatening toxicity has occurred. Initial Phase II studies in melanoma are currently in progress.
...
PMID:Phase I study of difluoromethylornithine in combination with recombinant alpha 2a-interferon. 314 Oct 46
Nine patients with metastatic breast cancer received 30 x 10(6) I.U. of Interferon - Betaser (Betaseron) intravenously daily times five for two consecutive weeks followed by a two week rest period. Only one patient received more than one such cycle of Betaseron. The drug was well tolerated in eight of these patients. One patient, with liver metastases and liver dysfunction, developed hepatic decompensation during therapy. Toxicity consisted of anorexia,
chills
, fever, fatigue and nausea with an occasional patient having emesis. One patient developed severe thrombocytopenia, two, significant leukopenia and nine, mild elevations of serum transaminase. Two patients developed beta
interferon
binding antibodies but none developed neutralizing antibodies. No anti-tumor responses were seen and disease progression occurred rapidly during the four week cycle in eight of nine patients.
...
PMID:Phase II trial of recombinant beta (IFN-betaser) interferon in the treatment of metastatic breast cancer. 319 87
Current therapy for condylomata acuminata (genital warts) is not consistently effective. Therefore, we conducted a randomized, double-blind trial to compare interferon alpha-2b with placebo in the treatment of this disorder. Our rationale was that
interferon
has both antiproliferative and antiviral properties. The placebo or
interferon
(1 X 10(6) IU) was injected directly into one to three warts three times weekly for three weeks. The injections were well tolerated by both groups of patients. The side effects of fever,
chills
, myalgia, headache, fatigue, and leukopenia occurred more commonly in the
interferon
group than in the placebo group, but such effects rarely disrupted daily routines. Only 13 of 296 patients (4 percent) discontinued therapy because of side effects (11 in the
interferon
group and 2 in the placebo group). Twenty-six other patients were excluded from analysis because of a loss to follow-up or other deviations from protocol, thus leaving 257 patients in the final evaluation. At one week after the completion of therapy,
interferon
had produced a large and significantly greater reduction in mean wart area (a 62.4 percent decrease), as compared with placebo (a 1.2 percent increase in mean area) (P less than 0.001). At the conclusion of the study (13 weeks after the completion of therapy), the mean wart area was still decreased 39.9 percent below the initial size in the
interferon
group, whereas it had increased by 46 percent over base-line measurements in the placebo group (P less than 0.001). At the same time, all treated warts had completely cleared in 36 percent of the
interferon
recipients and in 17 percent of the placebo recipients (P less than 0.001), whereas treated warts progressed in 13 percent of the
interferon
recipients and in 50 percent of the placebo recipients (P less than 0.001). We conclude that injection of interferon alpha-2b directly into genital warts appears to be an effective and fairly well-tolerated form of therapy.
...
PMID:Interferon therapy for condylomata acuminata. 353 60
Patients with nodular lymphoma initially respond to a number of therapies but relapse is common and inexorable with time, and despite further therapy, most patients will ultimately die of their lymphoma. The recent demonstration of their sensitivity to alpha-
interferon
is promising. The importance of this human antitumor effect is that it is presumably based on mechanisms different from conventional agents. Phase I trials of various doses and schedules of recombinant alpha-
interferon
have shown that effective serum levels can be obtained by intramuscular (IM), intravenous (IV), or subcutaneous (SC) routes. Virtually all patients experienced some degree of acute toxicity manifested by fever,
chills
, myalgia, and headache. Tolerance usually developed to acute adverse effects within the first few weeks of therapy, regardless of dose or schedule. Fatigue and anorexia were the most important adverse reactions, occurring during the first two weeks of treatment and generally persisting for the duration of therapy. Occasional adverse effects relating to the central nervous and cardiovascular systems have been reported. Primary laboratory abnormalities observed during treatment include decreases in hematologic parameters and elevations of liver function tests. The clinical efficacy of alpha-
interferon
, both natural and recombinant, has been demonstrated in both untreated and heavily pretreated patients with nodular lymphoma. The response rate has approached 50% in recent studies; however, less than half were complete responders. Future directions include combination of
interferon
with cytotoxic agents or other biological response modifiers and use as adjuvant therapy.
...
PMID:Alpha-interferon in the treatment of nodular lymphomas. 354 Dec 18
A total of 21 patients with advanced metastatic malignant melanoma were treated in this efficacy study of recombinant leukocyte A
interferon
(interferon alpha-2a). Patients received 18 X 10(6) units interferon alpha-2a by i.m. injection daily for the first 10 weeks and then three times weekly for a further 4 months. The symptoms of toxicity observed in this study resembled those previously reported for alpha interferons and included fever,
chills
, fatigue, anorexia, myalgia, headache, occasional nausea and vomiting, dose-dependent reversible leukopenia, and hepatic transaminase elevations. Of the 21 patients, 12 had evidence of tumor progression, 6 had stable disease for at least 2 months, and complete remission was seen in 3 patients with stage III melanoma. We conclude that interferon alpha-2a appears to have some antiproliferative effect in metastatic malignant melanoma. While its use in stage IV patients with big tumor masses is doubtful, there seems to be therapeutic benefit in earlier stages.
...
PMID:Phase II trial of recombinant leukocyte A interferon in advanced malignant melanoma. 358 16
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