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Query: UMLS:C0085593 (
chills
)
4,268
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Preclinical studies of recombinant human interleukin-3 (rhIL-3) and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhGM-
CSF
) have shown enhancement of multilineage hematopoiesis when administered sequentially. This study was designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and biologic effects of sequential administration of rhIL-3 and rhGM-
CSF
after marrow ablative cytotoxic therapy and autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT) for patients with malignant lymphoma. Thirty-seven patients (20 patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and 17 patients with Hodgkin's disease) received one of four different treatment regimens before ABMT. Patients were entered in one of four study groups to receive rhIL-3 (2.5 or 5.0 micrograms/kg/day) administered by subcutaneous injection for either 5 or 10 days starting 4 hours after the marrow infusion. Twenty-four hours after the last dose of rhIL-3, rhGM-
CSF
(250 micrograms/m2/d as a 2-hour intravenous infusion) administration was initiated. rhGM-
CSF
was administered daily until the absolute neutrophil count (ANC) was > or = 1,500/microL for 3 consecutive days or until day 27 posttransplant. The most frequent adverse events in the trial included nausea, fever, diarrhea, mucositis, vomiting, rash, edema,
chills
, abdominal pain, and tachycardia. Three patients were removed from the study because of chest, skeletal, and abdominal pain felt to be probably related to study drug. Four patients died during the study period because of complications unrelated to either rhIL-3 or rhGM-
CSF
. The median time to recovery of neutrophils (ANC > or = 500/microL) and platelets (platelet count > or = 20,000/microL) was 14 and 15 days, respectively. There were fewer days of platelet transfusions than seen in historical control groups using rhGM-
CSF
, rhG-
CSF
, or rhIL-3 alone. In addition, there were fewer days of red blood cell transfusions compared with historical controls using no cytokines or rhGM-
CSF
. These data indicate that the sequential administration of rhIL-3 and rhGM-
CSF
after ABMT is safe and generally well-tolerated and results in rapid recovery of multilineage hematopoiesis.
...
PMID:Sequential administration of recombinant human interleukin-3 and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor after autologous bone marrow transplantation for malignant lymphoma: a phase I/II multicenter study. 791 29
Seventeen patients with aplastic anaemia were treated with recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (rhGM-CSF) for 14 d. Nonresponding patients were then treated with anti-human thymocyte globulin (ATG), methylprednisolone and oxymetholone. Side-effects of rhGM-
CSF
included fever, nausea and vomiting, diarrhoea, bone pain, headache and
chills
. Two patients had sustained trilineage haemopoietic recovery after receiving only rhGM-
CSF
. Of 11 patients who received immunosuppressive therapy, there was one complete response, two partial responses, one minimal response, and seven nonresponses. Actuarial survival at 2 years is 64%. Early administration of rhGM-
CSF
had no apparent effect on subsequent response to immunosuppressive therapy.
...
PMID:Recombinant granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor followed by immunosuppressive therapy for aplastic anaemia. 825 89
Neutropenic pediatric patients with solid tumors and malignant lymphomas were treated with recombinant granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (rh-
GM-CSF
). Eleven patients, including seven lympho-reticular malignancies, two Ewing's sarcoma and one patient in each group with the diagnosis of nasopharyngeal rhabdomyosarcoma, malignant mesenchymal tumor, entered the study. Six were females and five were males, the mean age was 10.4 yr, the range was 4 to 21 years. rh-
GM-CSF
was given at the dose of 5 micrograms/kg s.c. daily, starting either on the day following the last day of cytotoxic chemotherapy or when ANC < 1000/ml was determined. All patients received rh-
GM-CSF
for a total of seven days. Hematopoietic recovery occurred in all children except one. The response to rh-
GM-CSF
was achieved in a mean time of 7.4 days. Tolerance to rh-
GM-CSF
treatment was good. Adverse events were documented as fever, nausea, vomiting, fatigue,
chills
and itching. Sagittal sinus thrombosis developed in one patient 5 days following the completion of chemotherapy and rh-
GM-CSF
cycle. In conclusion, rh-
GM-CSF
can be applied during the intensive chemotherapy schedules of pediatric cancer patients.
...
PMID:Granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (rh-GM-CSF) in the treatment of chemotherapy-induced neutropenia. 859 35
Methimazole 5 mg three times daily was prescribed in 1994 spring to a woman, aged 53 years, with relapsed hyperthyroidism. The drug was discontinued six weeks after initiation because of leukopenia. Two weeks still later, the patient developed
chills
, high fever, and a sore throat. The leukocyte count was 1,100/mm3 with 23% granulocytes, 76% lymphocytes and 1% monocytes. The granulocyte count stopped decreasing only three weeks after the drug was discontinued when the recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rhG-CSF) was given; the patient recovered uneventfully. Thus we recommend that the peripheral leukocyte count of patients who receive methimazole therapy must be carefully monitored during the first three months. Furthermore, the use of rhG-
CSF
for methimazole-induced agranulocytosis abbreviates the period required for marrow recovery after cessation of this offensive drug.
...
PMID:Methimazole-induced agranulocytosis treated with recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rhG-CSF): a case report. 860 51
A 47-year-old man presented with a history of fever,
chills
and weight loss for 3 months. He had been treated for diabetes mellitus during the past 3 years. He developed high fever with abnormal liver function tests. Both Widal and Weil-Felix reactions were negative with normal roentgenogram of the chest. His anti-HIV tests were positive. The cultures from the blood and sputum yielded pure Sphingobacterium multivorum sensitive to sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim, chloramphenicol, tetracycline, cefotaxime, ceftazidine and ceftriaxone. On the next day, the patient developed signs and symptoms of meningitis with the
CSF
containing chronic and acute inflammatory cells but revealed no growth on culture. The patient was treated with a combination of ceftriazone and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole but he died on the 6th day after admission. This patient was the fifth reported case infected with S.multivorum. It illustrates that this potentially pathogenic organism can cause septicemia in an immunodeficient patient.
...
PMID:Sphingobacterium multivorum septicemia: a case report. 885 15
We studied the effects of escalating doses of recombinant human IL-1 beta in patients receiving high-dose chemotherapy and ABMT for metastatic breast cancer or malignant melanoma. Sixteen patients received IL-1 beta, 4 to 32 ng/kg/day administered subcutaneously for 7 days beginning 3 h after bone marrow infusion. Three patients at the highest dose level also received G-CSF following completion of IL-1 beta. All patients completed the 7 days of therapy. The majority of patients experienced
chills
and fever following one or more injections, and seven had severe pain at the injection site. There was one episode of hypotension and one episode of transient confusion at the highest dose level; other significant toxicity was not identified. Recovery of neutrophils to > 0.5 x 10(9)l and platelet transfusion independence occurred at a median of 23 and 22 days, respectively, which was comparable to historical controls. The mean number of bone marrow colony-forming unit granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM) per 10(5) mononuclear cells on day +21 post-ABMT was more than twice that of control patients or patients receiving G-CSF or
GM-CSF
. A linear correlation was found between the dose of IL-1 beta and endogenous concentrations of several cytokines. These patients also displayed significantly higher concentrations of endogenous G-CSF compared to historical controls receiving
GM-CSF
. While IL-1 beta was moderately toxic and had no effect on recovery of peripheral blood counts after ABMT, the increased number of bone marrow CFU-GM suggests that the addition of G- or
GM-CSF
to a short course of IL-1 beta may accelerate hematologic recovery.
...
PMID:A phase I trial of recombinant human interleukin-1 beta (OCT-43) following high-dose chemotherapy and autologous bone marrow transplantation. 905 Dec 40
Therapeutic applications of novel growth factors and cytokines can be limited due to the oftentimes severe inflammatory reactions that are encountered in patients following parenteral administration. These inflammatory responses, hallmarked by fever, headache, and
chills
are mediated by the release of inflammatory cytokines following administration of protein-based therapeutics. TNF-alpha appears to be one of the most potent and pleiotropic inflammatory cytokines released during the early stages of an inflammatory response. In the present study, we have explored the use of an in vitro assay system to determine whether the release of TNF-alpha from human PBMC could be correlated with documented inflammatory activity in humans. The cytokines tested included rhGM-
CSF
, rhIL-2, rhIL-3, and rhIFN-gamma, rhG-
CSF
, which has been shown to lack substantial proinflammatory activity in humans, was also tested. The potent macrophage activator and inflammatory agent, LPS, was used as a positive control. Results of this study demonstrate and confirm an association between the inflammatory activity of cytokines observed in patients and the stimulation of TNF-alpha release from PBMC in vitro. This assay system can be used as a predictive tool in determining the inflammatory potential of novel growth factors and cytokines.
...
PMID:TNF-alpha release from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells to predict the proinflammatory activity of cytokines and growth factors. 908 89
The aim of this study was to evaluate tolerability and efficacy of
Leucomax
(Sandoz/Schering Plough) used for neutropenia in patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) treated with etoposide and cisplatin. The potential influence of granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) on chemotherapy relative dose intensity (RDI) was also evaluated. The chemotherapy used was the following, cisplatin 50 mg m-2 i.v. 1 and 7 day, etoposide 170 mg m-2 i.v. 3-5 days, q 3-4 weeks. Patients received a median of six cycles (range 2-8) over 4-36 weeks (median: 20). Thirty-two consecutive patients were treated, six were excluded. Eleven patients received GM-CSF 5 micrograms kg-1 s.c. due to absolute neutrophil count (ANC), 1000/mm3 until recovery (ANC > 2000 mm3) or during 7 days, and thereafter prophylactically 24 hours post subsequent chemotherapy cycles for 7 days. Four patients received single GM-CSF course during the terminal disease phase. In 11 patients, there was no neutropenia requiring GM-CSF during the whole treatment course. Toxicity of chemotherapy was high, including thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, anaemia, mucositis, fever and hypotension. GM-CSF toxicity was the following, first dose reaction-one patient, local erythema-two patients, arthralgia-one patient, hypotension,
chills
, fever requiring GM-CSF discontinuation one patient RDI of cisplatin/etoposide was 0.77/0.62 in GM-CSF group, and 0.90/ 0.80 in patients who didn't receive
Leucomax
. Overall objective response rate to chemotherapy and complete response rate were 80% (21/26), 26% (7/26) and median survival of all patients was 10 months. Median disease free survival was 8 months. Four patients are alive, two patients lost during progression, 20 died. Administration of GM-CSF did not appear to improve RDI of chemotherapy, overall response rate (RR) nor survival in this phase I/II clinical study. RDI of chemotherapy was reduced in patients receiving GM-CSF due to thrombocytopenia and/or extrahaematologic toxicity of chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Tolerability and efficacy of GM-CSF [Leucomax] in patients with small cell lung cancer treated with intensive chemotherapy. 915 70
The class I IgG receptor (Fc gamma RI or CD64 receptor), which is present on key cytotoxic effector cells, has been shown to initiate the destruction of tumor cells in vitro and has been hypothesized to play a role in the destruction of antibody-coated cells such as platelets in idiopathic thrombocytopenia purpura (ITP). This overview summarizes the clinical experience with CD64-directed immunotherapy in cancer patients with the bispecific antibodies MDX-447 [humanized Fab anti-CD64 x humanized Fab anti-(epidermal growth factor receptor, EGFR)] and MDX-H210 (humanized Fab anti-DC64 x Fab anti-HER2/neu), and with the anti-CD64 monoclonal antibody (mAB) MDX-33 (H22) in the modulation of monocyte CD64 in vivo. In an ongoing phase I/II open-label trial with progressive dose escalation (1-15 mg/m2), patients with treatment refractory EGFR-positive cancers (renal cell carcinoma (RCC), head and neck, bladder, ovarian, prostate cancer and skin cancer) are treated weekly with intravenous MDX-447, with and without granulocyte-colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF). MDX-447 has been found to be immunologically active at all doses, binding to circulating monocytes and neutrophils (when given with G-CSF), causing monocytopenia and stimulating increases in circulating plasma cytokines. MDX-447 is well tolerated, the primary toxicities being fever,
chills
, blood pressure lability, and pain/ myalgias. Of 36 patients evaluable for response, 9 have experienced stable disease of 3-6 month's duration. The optimal dose and the maximal tolerated dose (MTD) have yet to be defined; dose escalation continues to define better the dose, toxicity, and the potential therapeutic role of this bispecific antibody. Three MDX-H210 phase II trials are currently in progress, all using the intravenous dose of 15 mg/m2 given with granulocyte/macrophage (
GM-CSF
). These consist of one trial each in the treatment of RCC patients, patients with prostate cancer, and colorectal cancer patients, all of whom have failed standard therapy. At the time of writing, 11 patients have been treated in these phase II trials. Four patients have demonstrated antitumor effects. Patients demonstrating responses include 2 with RCC and 2 with prostate cancer. One RCC patient has had a 54% reduction in size of a hepatic metastatic lesion and the other has had a 49% decrease in the size of a lung metastasis with simultaneous clearing of other non-measurable lung lesions. Regarding the two patients with prostate cancer, one has had a 90% reduction in serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA; 118-11 ng/ml), which has persisted for several months; the other patient with prostate has had a 70% reduction of serum PSA (872 ng/ml to 208 ng/ml) within the first month of treatment. Both patients have also demonstrated symptomatic improvement. In a completed phase I and in ongoing phase I/II clinical trials, patients with treatment-refractory HER2/neu positive cancers (breast, ovarian, colorectal, prostate) have been treated with MDX-H210, which has been given alone and in conjunction with G-
CSF
,
GM-CSF
, and interferon gamma (IFN gamma). These trials have been open-label, progressive dose-escalation (0.35-135 mg/m2) studies in which single, and more often, multiple weekly doses have been administered. MDX-H210 has been well tolerated, with untoward effects being primarily mild-to-moderate flu-like symptoms. The MTD has not yet been defined. MDX-H210 is immunologically active, binding to circulating monocytes, causing monocytopenia, as well as stimulating increases in plasma cytokine levels. Furthermore, some patients have evidence of active antitumor immunity following treatment with MDX-210. Antitumor effects have been seen in response to MDX-H210 administration; these include 1 partial, 2 minor, and 1 mixed tumor response; 15 protocol-defined stable disease responses have occurred. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
...
PMID:Clinical experience with CD64-directed immunotherapy. An overview. 943 76
The purpose of our study was to determine the maximally tolerated dose (MTD) and DLT of combined administration of granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), low-dose interleukin 2 (IL-2) and IFN-alpha in patients with progressive metastatic melanoma or renal cell carcinoma (RCC). In addition, the activation and expansion of effector cells were measured. Cohorts of three patients were treated with increasing doses of IL-2 (1, 4, and 8 MIU/m2) and GM-
CSF
(2.5 and 5 microg/kg) with a constant dose of IFNalpha (5 million units) s.c. for 12 days every 3 weeks. An additional six patients were treated at the MTD. Immune activation was monitored during the first cycle. Response was evaluated after two cycles. The MTD was found to be 2.5 microg/kg GM-
CSF
, 4 MIU/m2 IL-2, and 5 mega units of IFNalpha. DLT was grade 4 fever,
chills
with hypotension, grade 3 fatigue/malaise, and fluid retention. Dose reduction of IL-2 to 2 MIU/m2 was necessary in three of nine patients who initially received the MTD. Treatment was initiated in the hospital but could be continued at home after 3-4 days. Significant increases in lymphocytes, (activated) T cells (CD4+ and CD8+), NK cells, monocyte DR expression, neutrophils, and eosinophils were found. CD8+ T-cell activation (sCD8) and NK cell expansion was mainly present in patients receiving 2 or 4 MIU/m2 IL-2. Of eight patients with progressive metastatic RCC after nephrectomy, three achieved a complete remission, and 1 of 7 patients with metastatic melanoma achieved a partial remission. In our study, the MTD of combined immunotherapy with GM-
CSF
, IL-2, and IFNalpha was established; DLT was: (a) grade 4 fever with hypotension needing i.v. fluid support; and (b) grade 3 fluid retention and/or fatigue/malaise. The scheme resulted in considerable expansion and/or activation of various effector cells. The complete responses in RCC patients are promising but need to be confirmed in Phase II studies.
...
PMID:Phase I trial of combined immunotherapy with subcutaneous granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor, low-dose interleukin 2, and interferon alpha in progressive metastatic melanoma and renal cell carcinoma. 1105 Dec 73
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