Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0278488 (metastatic breast cancer)
7,812 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In this study we report on some lines of ongoing research performed in our laboratory, in relation to the increased expression of FcR on tumor cells, as well as on cells present in the tumor-bearing host, and its possible role in tumor progression. In a previous study we have shown that a Polyoma virus (PyV)-induced anaplastic carcinoma (SEYF-a tumor) contained an FcR-expressing subpopulation of tumorigenic cells. We tested the effect of in vivo passaging of FcR-expressing and of non-FcR-expressing sub-populations of SEYF-a tumor cells on the expression of FcR, as revealed by the ability of these cells to bind the 2.4G2 monoclonal antibody, which is directed against mouse Fc gamma 2b/gamma 1R. It was found that upon in vivo passaging these two sub-populations became practically identical in their ability to bind anti-Fc gamma R antibody. On the other hand, in vitro passaging of FcR-expressing SEYF-a cells resulted in a gradual decrease in the expression of Fc gamma R. These results, indicating that the expression of Fc gamma R on tumor cells, per se, is dependent on a factor present in the in vivo environment were confirmed using 3T3 cells transformed in vitro by PyV (C) and forming tumors at first injection to mice (CTC). C cultures of various clones did not express Fc gamma R, while CTC cultures (cultures from tumors) became positive. We also detected an increase in the level of a soluble form of Fc gamma 2b/gamma 1R in the circulation of mice bearing PyV induced tumors. This increase paralleled the appearance of palpable tumors. A similar pattern of increase was observed in mice inoculated with the c-H-ras transformed tumorigenic clone 8/F/5, but not in mice inoculated with non-tumorigenic 3T3 cells. Data published by us show that metastatic breast cancer patients had significantly elevated Fc gamma R levels on their peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). Experiments presented here indicate a direct correlation between increased Fc gamma R levels on PBMC and tumor mass in colon, ovary and lung metastatic carcinoma patients. The possibility that malignantly transformed cells have the potential to cause proliferation of Fc gamma R expressing T cells was tested. It was found that extract derived from r-H-ras transformed 3T3 cells triggers the proliferation of a T cell hybridoma expressing Fc gamma R.
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PMID:Increased expression of Fc gamma receptor in cancer patients and tumor bearing mice. 285 35

We have conducted a clinical and pharmacokinetic trial of the novel podophyllotoxin derivative NK611 administered orally for 21 consecutive days. The treatment was repeated every 35 days. Eighteen patients were included into the study, all of whom were eligible. Due to early progression of tumor disease in two patients, 16 patients were evaluable for toxicity [7 female, 9 male, median age 64 years (range: 44 to 73)]. Dose escalation steps were 5 mg/day [105 mg per cycle (pc)], 10 mg/day (210 mg pc), 12.5 mg/day (265 mg pc) and 15 mg/day (315 mg pc). A total of 37 courses was administered. Toxicity was evaluated using NCI-CTC criteria. Granulocytopenia was the main hematologic toxicity. Other hematologic toxicities were sporadic. Non-hematologic toxicities were mild and consisted of grade 1 nausea and grade 2 alopecia. Pharmacokinetic analyses were performed in six patients each treated with 10 mg/day and 12.5 mg per day, and in one patient treated with 15 mg/day. Using a two-compartment model, t1/2 alpha ranged from 0.47 to 1.54 h and t1/2 beta from 2.0-11.6 h. Mean values for Cmax and AUC were 1.47 +/- 0.331 microgram/ml and 13.67 +/- 3.81 micrograms/ml.h. No objective tumor responses were observed. However, one patient with metastatic breast cancer had stable disease for twelve months. We conclude that the Maximum Tolerated Dose of NK611 administered daily for 21 consecutive days is 12.5 mg/day. The Dose-Limiting Toxicity is granulocytopenia. The recommended dose for further clinical Phase II studies is 10 mg/day.
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PMID:Clinical and pharmacokinetic phase I trial of oral dimethylaminoetoposide (NK611) administered for 21 days every 35 days. 915 73

Results from our previous phase II study demonstrating high efficacy and low toxicity for a weekly schedule of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU)/leucovorin in intensively pretreated patients with metastatic breast cancer prompted addition of paclitaxel and cisplatin to this regimen for a phase II study of outpatient first-line treatment of metastatic breast cancer. (MBC). Twenty-eight patients with metastatic breast cancer have been evaluated. Pretreatment comprised adjuvant CTX in 24 out of 28 patients, but no prior CTX for MBC. Patients were treated with 5-FU 2 g/m2 (24 h infusion) plus leucovorin 500 mg/m2 (2 h infusion prior to 5-FU) weekly for 6 weeks (days 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 and 36); in addition, paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 (3 h infusion) was administered on days 0 and 21, and cisplatin 50 mg/m2 (1 h infusion) on days 1 and 22 prior to 5-FU/leucovorin, repeated every 50 days. All patients were treated as outpatients using Port-a-Cath systems and portable pumps. Aside from common total alopecia, neutropenia was common but only of short duration. No episodes of febrile neutropenia occurred. Non-hematologic toxicities (NCl CTC grade, percent of patients) consisted of mild to moderate diarrhea (2+3, 47%), mucositis (2, 14%), and nausea and vomiting (2+3, 60%). Out of 28 patients with bidimensionally measurable disease 25% (seven out of 28) achieved a CR, 57% (16 out of 28) achieved a PR, 11% (three out of 28) had a SD and 7% (two out of 28) had a PD. Overall RR was 82% (95% confidence interval 66-100%). Median remission duration was 8 months, median time to progression 9 months and median survival time 28 months with a median follow-up of 21 months. We conclude that the combination of paclitaxel, cisplatin and 5-FU/leucovorin is an effective non-anthracycline-containing regimen for the first-line treatment of MBC.
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PMID:Phase II study with cisplatin and paclitaxel in combination with weekly high-dose 24 h infusional 5-fluorouracil/leucovorin for first-line treatment of metastatic breast cancer. 962 30

42 breast cancer patients were treated by high-dose chemotherapy (HDC) and autologous peripheral stem-cell transplantation (ASTx) in the Donauspital between 1992 and 1999. 24 patients had stage II/III breast cancer with high risk for relapse. The other 18 patients underwent HDC and ASTx in chemosensitive stage IV. After previous conventional chemotherapy peripheral stem-cells were harvested by one cycle of mobilisation chemotherapy (epirubicin/taxol, FEC 120 or cyclophosphamide) followed by cytokine stimulation. 16 patients were treated by a tandem transplantation (conditioning protocol for 1st ASTx was melphalan 200 mg/m2 and for 2nd transplant it was CTC: cyclophosphamide 6 g/m2; thiotepa 500 mg/m2; carboplatin 800 mg/m2). The other 26 patients received one HDC with CTC as conditioning protocol. The HDC was well tolerated by all patients, there was no transplant-related mortality. The median survival and the progression-free survival (PFS) after HDC and ASTx in stage IV breast cancer patients were 28 and 11 months, respectively. The median survival and PFS were not yet reached in stage II/III patients after 55 months. The actuarial survival and PFS in that patient group were 70% after 55 months. Our data confirm the low risk and good efficacy of HDC and ASTx in breast cancer patients. Nevertheless randomised studies are necessary to evaluate the importance of HDC compared to intensified conventional protocols without ASTx.
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PMID:[High dosage therapy and autologous peripheral stem cell transplantation in breast carcinoma]. 1126 Dec 76

A phase II study was conducted to evaluate the activity of pemetrexed in patients with locally recurrent or metastatic breast cancer. 38 patients, median age 52 years (range 36-71 years), were given pemetrexed 600 mg/m(2) as a 10-min intravenous (i.v.) infusion every 3 weeks. Median time from diagnosis to study entry was 48 months (range 14.7-310 months). 33 of 38 patients had prior chemotherapy; 16 adjuvant, 12 metastatic and 5 in both settings. Sites of disease included skin and soft tissue (19/38) nodes (18/38), lung (17/38), liver (13/38) and bone (3/38). An overall response rate of 28% (95% confidence interval (CI): 14.2-45.2%) in 10/36 evaluable patients (1 complete response (CR), 9 partial responses (PR)), included reductions in hepatic and pulmonary metastases. 5 of 10 responders had received taxoid or anthracycline therapy for metastatic disease; 3 of these 5 had also received adjuvant chemotherapy. Median duration of response was 8 months (range 1.6-14+ months), and median survival was 13 months (95% CI 9.56-17.38 months). 167 courses were given (median five per patient; range 1-9), with 37 reductions and 33 delays. Reasons for reduction included neutropenia (11%) and mucositis (5%), with delays due to raised LFTs (21%), neutropenia (12%) and other non-treatment related events. The major haematological toxicities (Common Toxicity Criteria) (CTC) were grade 3/4 neutropenia (47%) and thrombocytopenia (15.7%) of patients. There was one report of a grade 3 infection. Non-haematological toxicities (all grades 2/3) included elevated transaminases (92%), vomiting (34%), nausea (34%) and mucositis (32%). One episode of grade 4 diarrhoea was reported. Other toxicities included a skin rash, grade 2 (42%), 3 (5%) and 4 (13%), which was ameliorated by the use of prophylactic dexamethasone. These results suggest that pemetrexed has significant antitumour activity in advanced breast cancer with responses in patients who had previously received anthracyclines and taxoids.
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PMID:A phase II study of pemetrexed disodium (LY231514) in patients with locally recurrent or metastatic breast cancer. 1143 66

We evaluated the toxicity and efficacy of the first palliative chemotherapy regimen after failure of high-dose chemotherapy in 148 patients with primary or metastatic breast cancer treated with high-dose chemotherapy (one full dose CTC, (cyclophosphamide 6000 mg/m2, thiotepa 480 mg/m2, carboplatin 1600 mg/m2) or multiple courses CTC or 'tiny' CTC (tCTC) (two-thirds of the agents of the full-dose regimen), all divided over 4 days). After a median follow-up time of 46.8 (range 1-120) months, 79 patients had a relapse or progressive disease and 41 patients were treated with palliative chemotherapy. The most commonly used regimens were classical CMF (n = 13), docetaxel (n = 16) and less frequently anthracycline (n = 4), paclitaxel (n = 5), capecitabine (n = 2) and vinorelbine (n = 2). In both the CMF and docetaxel group, 3 patients required a dose reduction because of hematological toxicity. Objective responses were seen with CMF (23%) and docetaxel (69%) with a median duration of 161 (range 28-481) and 196 (range 62-437) days, respectively. We found no relationship of toxicity and response with treatment-free interval after high-dose chemotherapy. This report shows that conventional-dose palliative chemotherapy regimens may be safe and effective after failure of high-dose chemotherapy.
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PMID:Palliative chemotherapy after failure of high-dose chemotherapy in breast cancer--toxicity and efficacy. 1292 15

One hundred and sixteen women with measurable metastatic breast cancer participated in a randomised phase II study of single agent liposomal pegylated doxorubicin (Caelyx) given either as a 60 mg/m2 every 6 weeks (ARM A) or 50 mg/m2 every 4 weeks (ARM B) schedule. Patients were over 65 years of age or, if younger, had refused or been unsuitable for standard anthracyclines. The aims of the study were to evaluate toxicity and dose delivery with the two schedules and obtain further information on the response rate of liposomal pegylated doxorubicin as a single agent in anthracycline nai ve advanced breast cancer. Twenty-six patients had received prior adjuvant chemotherapy (including an anthracycline in 10). Sixteen had received non-anthracycline-based first-line chemotherapy for advanced disease. One hundred and eleven patients were evaluable for toxicity and 106 for response. The delivered dose intensity (DI) was 9.8 mg/m2 (95% CI, 7.2-10.4) with 37 (69%) achieving a DI of >90% on ARM A and 11.9 mg/m2 (95% CI, 7.5-12.8) with 37 (65%) achieving a DI of >90% on ARM B. The adverse event profiles of the two schedules were distinctly different. Mucositis was more common with the every 6 weeks regimen (35% CTC grade 3/4 in ARM A, 14% in ARM B) but palmar plantar erythrodysesthesia (PPE) was more frequent with the every 4 weeks regimen (2% CTC grade 3/4 in ARM A, 16% in ARM B). Confirmed objective partial responses by RECIST criteria were seen with both schedules; 15/51 (29%) on ARM A and 17/56 (31%) on ARM B. Liposomal pegylated doxorubicin showed significant activity in advanced breast cancer with a generally favourable side-effect profile. The high frequency of stomatitis seen with 6 weekly treatment makes this the less preferred of the two schedules tested.
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PMID:A randomised phase II study of two different schedules of pegylated liposomal doxorubicin in metastatic breast cancer (EORTC-10993). 1652 33

Despite the progress resulting from early detection and improved adjuvant therapy, the prognosis of breast cancer patients is still limited by the occurrence of distant metastases largely due to clinically occult micrometastases that remain undetected at primary diagnosis even by high-resolution imaging approaches. Recent research efforts have concentrated on the identification of additional parameters allowing individual risk assessment and stratification of patients for targeted therapies, since traditional prognostic factors are not sufficient to predict metastatic relapse and treatment decisions are still mainly based on statistical risk parameters. Highly sensitive and specific immunocytochemical and molecular assays now enable the detection and characterization of disseminated and circulating tumor cells (DTCs and CTCs, respectively) at the single cell level in bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood, providing insights into the first crucial steps of the metastatic cascade. However, because of the still high variability of results in DTC/CTC detection, the necessity of standardized approaches will be discussed. A large number of studies showed that the presence of DTCs in BM has prognostic impact for primary breast cancer patients. DTCs are likely to escape from chemotherapy by maintaining a dormant nonproliferating state. There is also evidence for a stem cell-like phenotype of DTCs, probably contributing to the opportunity to escape from dormancy control and to start expansion to manifest metastases. Blood would also be an ideal source for the detection and monitoring of CTCs because of an easy noninvasive sampling procedure enabling repeated analyses. While prognostic significance of CTCs could be reliably demonstrated for metastatic breast cancer, studies to analyze the impact of CTCs in primary breast cancer patients and the potential to replace or supplement BM analysis are still ongoing. Furthermore, molecular characterization of CTCs might contribute to improving targeted and more individualized cancer therapies.
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PMID:Disseminated tumor cells in bone marrow and circulating tumor cells in blood of breast cancer patients: current state of detection and characterization. 1854 69

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the efficacy (progression free survival (PFS) and response rate) and safety of vinorelbine and trastuzumab combination chemotherapy in patients with HER2-overexpressing, metastatic breast cancer as a first line chemotherapy regimen. Patients with histologically confirmed, HER2-positive (immunohistochemistry (ICH) 3+, or 2+ and FISH+) metastatic breast cancer who had nor received prior vinorelbine or anti-HER2 therapy in the adjuvant setting, received at least eight weeks of vinorelbine i.v. (25 mg/g weekly) and trastuzumab (4 mg/kg on day 1 followed by 2 mg/kg weekly). Forty-one women from six participating centers were enrolled into the trial. The overall response rate, was 43.9% (18 of 41 patients), (CI 28-60.3%), 30% of patients were progression free after 1 year. Four patients reached complete remission, 14 partial remission and five had stable disease for at least 18 weeks. Six patients developed primary progression. 35 patients (85%) experienced progression after a median time of 235 days. Therapy was in general well-tolerated. There were two CTC grade 4 infusion syndromes and two patients experienced cardiotoxicity at least grade 2. This phase II trial of vinorelbine and trastuzumab demonstrated an effective and well-tolerated regimen with a favourable safety profile.
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PMID:Phase II trial of vinorelbine and trastuzumab in patients with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer. A prospective, open label, non-controlled, multicenter phase II trial (to investigate efficacy and safety of this combination chemotherapy). 1869 11

The combination therapy of doxorubicin and trastuzumab has been proven to be highly effective for metastatic breast cancer (MBC) patients with Her2/neu over-expressing tumors. However, this regimen is characterized by frequent cardiac toxicity, occurring in 27% of all treated patients and aggravating when the two substances are given concurrently. Pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) as a single agent reduces significantly cardiac toxicity and maintains efficacy compared to conventional doxorubicin. This prospective open labeled, multicenter phase II study assessed the potential cardiotoxicity and efficacy of PLD and trastuzumab as first and second line combination therapy in Her2/neu over-expressing MBC patients. Patients with Her2 over-expressing, measurable MBC with a baseline left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) > or =50% were treated with PLD 40 mg/m(2) every 4 weeks for 6 up to 9 cycles and weekly trastuzumab (4 mg/kg loading dose, then 2 mg/kg). Cardiotoxicity was defined as the appearance of clinical signs or symptoms of congestive heart failure in combination with a decrease in LVEF < or =44% or > or =10 units below the normal value of 50% in the obligatory, subsequently performed transthoracic echocardiography. Due to conflicting interests, the planned accrual goal of 30 patients was not reached. Finally 16 patients were enrolled. Ten patients presented with more than one metastatic site and six of them were in second-line therapy. The median LVEF in the study cohort was 66.1 +/- 8.68% at baseline, 62.7 +/- 5.11% after 6 cycles of therapy, 64.4 +/- 7.61% at the first follow up and did not change significantly (61.0 +/- 5.56% even at the 5th follow-up). Six out of 12 assessable patients (50.0%) demonstrated a clinical benefit and after a median follow-up of 15.4 months a median progression free survival of 9.67 and a median overall survival of 16.23 months. Non-cardiac side effects were mild with only 3 CTC grade 3 events of 247 treatment cycles (1.2%) and no grade 4 toxicities. The combination of PLD and trastuzumab in patients with Her2/neu over-expressing metastatic breast cancer is a safe, feasible and effective therapy. However, cardiac function should be monitored at close intervals. Due to the promising clinical response rates and mild toxicity profile in this prognostically unfavorable group, this combination therapy should be evaluated in larger studies.
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PMID:Pegylated liposomal doxorubicin and trastuzumab as 1st and 2nd line therapy in her2/neu positive metastatic breast cancer: a multicenter phase II trial. 1938 27


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