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Query: UMLS:C0854467 (
myelosuppression
)
5,932
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twenty-five patients, ranging from 21 to 61 years of age (median = 45 years), with histologically proven recurrent and advanced cervical cancer were treated with chemotherapy using a combination of bleomycin, ifosfamide, and cis-platinum (BIP). Twenty-one patients were evaluable for response. Ninety percent of patients achieved a subjective response. An objective response was noted in 14 of 21 (66.6%) patients: complete in 4 (19%) and partial in 10 (47.6%). Side effects were mainly nausea/vomiting, alopecia,
myelosuppression
, reversible
encephalopathy
, and impaired renal function. One patient died from the toxic effects of chemotherapy. These results indicate that BIP is an active combination in recurrent cervical cancer with acceptable toxicity.
...
PMID:Chemotherapy in recurrent and advanced cervical cancer. 171 53
Ifosfamide is an oxazaphosphorine alkylating agent with a broad spectrum of antineoplastic activity. It is a prodrug metabolised in the liver by cytochrome P450 mixed-function oxidase enzymes to isofosforamide mustard, the active alkylating compound. Mesna, a uroprotective thiol agent, is routinely administered concomitantly with ifosfamide, and has almost eliminated ifosfamide-induced haemorrhagic cystitis and has reduced nephron toxicity. Therapeutic studies, mostly noncomparative in nature, have demonstrated the efficacy of ifosfamide/mesna alone, or more commonly as a component of combination regimens, in a variety of cancers. In patients with relapsed or refractory disseminated nonseminomatous testicular cancer, a salvage regimen of ifosfamide/mesna, cisplatin and either etoposide or vinblastine produced complete response in approximately one-quarter of patients. As a component of both induction and salvage chemotherapeutic regimens, ifosfamide/mesna has produced favourable response rates in small cell lung cancer, paediatric solid tumours, non-Hodgkin's and Hodgkin's lymphoma, and ovarian cancer. Induction therapy with ifosfamide/mesna-containing chemotherapeutic regimens has been encouraging in non-small cell lung cancer, adult soft-tissue sarcomas, and as neoadjuvant therapy in advanced cervical cancer. As salvage therapy, ifosfamide/mesna-containing combinations have a palliative role in advanced breast cancer and advanced cervical cancer. Ifosfamide/mesna can elicit responses in patients refractory to numerous other antineoplastic drugs, including cyclophosphamide. With administration of concomitant mesna to protect against ifosfamide-induced urotoxicity, the principal dose-limiting toxicity of ifosfamide is
myelosuppression
; leucopenia is generally more severe than thrombocytopenia. Reversible CNS adverse effects ranging from mild somnolence and confusion to severe
encephalopathy
and coma can occur in approximately 10 to 20% of patients after intravenous infusion, and the incidence of neurotoxicity may be increased to 50% after oral administration because of differences in the preferential route of metabolism between the 2 routes of administration. Other adverse effects of ifosfamide include nephrotoxicity, alopecia, and nausea/vomiting. In general, intravenously administered mesna is associated with a low incidence of adverse effects; however, gastrointestinal disturbances are common following oral administration. Thus, ifosfamide/mesna is an important and worthwhile addition to the currently available range of chemotherapeutic agents. It has a broad spectrum of antineoplastic activity and causes less marked
myelosuppression
than many other cytotoxic agents. At present, the role of ifosfamide/mesna in refractory germ cell testicular cancer is clearly defined; however, its overall place in the treatment of other forms of cancer awaits delineation in future well-controlled comparative studies.
...
PMID:Ifosfamide/mesna. A review of its antineoplastic activity, pharmacokinetic properties and therapeutic efficacy in cancer. 172 Mar 82
Fludarabine phosphate (NSC 312878), an adenosine deaminase resistant analogue of 9-beta-D-arabinofuranosyladenine, has entered clinical trials. Eleven patients with acute leukemia in relapse received 14 courses of fludarabine phosphate as a 5-day continuous infusion administered at doses of 40 to 100 mg/m2/day. Toxicity was characterized by uniform
myelosuppression
, as well as occasional nausea, vomiting, and hepatotoxicity. Three episodes of metabolic acidosis and lactic acidemia were noted. In addition, three patients suffered neurotoxicity. Two of these three patients had a severe neurotoxicity syndrome characterized by blindness,
encephalopathy
, and coma. Neither patient recovered neurological function. Neuropathological findings at autopsy were characterized by a diffuse, necrotizing leukoencephalopathy which was most severe in the occipital lobes. The medullary pyramids and posterior columns were also severely affected. This sporadic fatal neurotoxicity was observed only at doses greater than 40 mg/m2/day. The maximum tolerated dose for a 5-day infusion of fludarabine phosphate is thus 40 mg/m2/day.
...
PMID:Fludarabine phosphate (NSC 312878) infusions for the treatment of acute leukemia: phase I and neuropathological study. 242 88
To augment the antitumor effect of high-dose melphalan and determine pharmacokinetics we conducted a phase I trial of escalating doses of high-dose IV melphalan with the chemosensitizer misonidazole for patients with advanced colorectal carcinoma. Fourteen patients with modified Dukes D adenocarcinoma of the colorectum were treated with a single course of melphalan (40-60 mg/m2 i.v. bolus q.d. X 3 days) and misonidazole (1-3 g/m2 p.o. q.d. X 3 days) followed by autologous bone marrow transplantation. Toxicity consisted of severe
myelosuppression
, moderate nausea and vomiting, and mild mucositis and diarrhea. One patient developed unexplained renal tubular acidosis, and a diffuse
encephalopathy
occurred in another patient. Three patients died within the first 30 days after the start of treatment, two due to tumor progression and one due to sepsis and disseminated intravascular coagulation-induced intracerebral hemorrhage. Six of 14 patients achieved a partial response, and the median response duration was 4 months (range 3-10 months). Analysis of misonidazole serum concentrations showed similar pharmacokinetics to those previously reported, suggesting no significant drug interaction with intravenous melphalan. Mean peak serum concentrations ranged from 81.8 micrograms/ml to 115.2 micrograms/ml at the second and third misonidazole dose levels, which approximate those known to provide effective chemosensitization with melphalan in animal models. In this phase I study, we showed that maximally tolerated doses of intravenous melphalan can safely be combined with oral misonidazole. In view of the large volumes of oral misonidazole required at the highest dose level, subsequent studies to determine the maximally tolerated dose of misonidazole should employ the intravenous form.
...
PMID:High-dose melphalan, misonidazole, and autologous bone marrow transplantation for the treatment of metastatic colorectal carcinoma. A phase I study. 265 May 27
Twenty patients with advanced epithelial ovarian carcinoma who had failed alkylating agent treatment were given cisplatin 60 mg/m2 together with ifosfamide 4 g/m2 and mesna 6 g/m2 every 4 weeks for 4-6 cycles. The overall response rate was 45% and the complete response rate 20%. The median time to disease progression was 9 months and 4 of the 9 responding patients are alive at more than 2 years. WHO Grade 3 or 4
myelosuppression
was seen in 7 patients, nephrotoxicity in 4, and
encephalopathy
in 1 patient. Nausea and vomiting of moderate severity (WHO Grade 3) was seen in the majority of patients. While a dose escalation of 25% of both drugs was possible in 4 patients,
myelosuppression
became limiting at the higher dose. The combination of cisplatin and ifosfamide is effective in relapsed ovarian cancer even in this group of patients with heavy pretreatment.
...
PMID:A study of cis-platinum and ifosfamide in alkylating agent-resistant ovarian cancer. 291 Jul 85
One hundred and seventy-one patients with advanced soft tissue sarcoma entered a randomized crossover phase II study comparing cyclophosphamide (CYCLO) with a new analogue, ifosfamide (IFOS), both administered as 24 h i.v. infusions every 3 weeks. The doses used were CYCLO 1.5 g/m2 and IFOS 5 g/m2, with provision for dose escalation. All patients received mesna 400 mg/m2 as an i.v. bolus 4 hourly X 9 doses, commencing at the start of the oxazophosphorine infusion. Patients who had received previous chemotherapy were eligible provided this did not include a classical alkylating agent. There were 22 patients who were ineligible, and response could not be evaluated in 12 additional patients. IFOS produced two complete and ten partial remissions, for an overall response rate of 18%. CYCLO was significantly (P = 0.04) less active, producing one complete and five partial remissions, an overall response rate of 9%. Stabilization of disease was similar in both arms (27% and 24% respectively), but fewer patients showed progression on IFOS. The response rate was higher (20% vs 5%) for patients who had not received previous chemotherapy, and also for female compared with male patients (21% vs 5%). When only patients who had not received previous chemotherapy were considered, the respective response rates for IFOS and CYCLO were 24% and 15%. There were no responses in previously treated patients receiving CYCLO. There were four partial responses in 33 patients crossing from CYCLO to IFOS, but no responses in 18 patients receiving CYCLO after IFOS. Leucopenia was significantly more pronounced (P = 0.0004) with CYCLO, both after the first course and throughout treatment, although the incidence of severe infections, 6%, was the same in both arms. Nausea and vomiting were more severe with IFOS (P = 0.022), but other toxicities were mild. Grade 1 or 2 bladder (haematuria) or renal (rise in serum creatinine) toxicity was slightly more frequent with IFOS (7 vs 3 patients) and was a reason for stopping treatment for one patient in each arm. Three episodes of mild to moderate drowsiness after IFOS were reported, but no severe
encephalopathy
. A higher response rate with less
myelosuppression
suggests that IFOS may have advantages over CYCLO in combination with such active agents as adriamycin.
...
PMID:Cyclophosphamide versus ifosfamide: preliminary report of a randomized phase II trial in adult soft tissue sarcomas. 310 89
Ifosfamide (IFOS) 5 g/m2 and its parent analog Cyclophosphamide (CYCLO) 1.5 g/m2 were studied in a randomized phase II study, accruing 171 patients with advanced soft tissue sarcoma. Both drugs were administered as 24 hr infusions, every 3 weeks, with comcomitant Mesna 400 mg/m2 i.v. bolus 4 hourly X 9 doses. Twenty-four patients were ineligible and 12 were not evaluable. The groups were well matched for age, previous chemotherapy (42% of the total) or radiotherapy, the presence of distant metastases and performance status, but there were more females (59% vs. 45%) in the IFOS arm. Among the 68 evaluable patients receiving IFOS, there were 2 CR, 10 PR (overall response 18%), 27 SD and 29 PD. For CYCLO, the corresponding results in 67 patients were 1 CR, 4 PR (overall response 8%), 23 SD and 39 PD. Using the chi-square test the P values for response rate and linear trend were 0.13 and 0.04 respectively. Response rates were higher for females (20% vs. 5%, P = 0.01) and patients who had not received previous chemotherapy (19% vs. 4%, P = 0.01). Fourteen of the 17 responses came from a group of 43 females, who had not received previous chemotherapy, for whom the overall response rate was 37.5%. Remissions were noted in only 4 histological subtypes (centrally reviewed material), i.e., 5 of 17 synovial sarcomas, 7 of 13 mixed mesodermal sarcomas and 2 of 7 fibrosarcomas. One of the 31 leiomyosarcomas responded to Cyclophosphamide. Durations of response did not differ significantly between the 2 arms--median 26, range 10-81+ weeks. Leucopenia was significantly more severe on CYCLO, particularly in patients who had received previous chemotherapy (P = 0.007). Serious infections occurred in approx. 7% of patients with no difference between the two drugs, although there was one toxic death on CYCLO. Nausea and vomiting were significantly worse on IFOS and alopecia, related in extent to dose, was seen in both arms. Other side-effects, such as hematuria or rises in serum creatinine and
encephalopathy
, were infrequent and mild. A higher response rate with less
myelosuppression
suggests that IFOS may have advantages over CYCLO in combination therapy.
...
PMID:Cyclophosphamide versus ifosfamide: final report of a randomized phase II trial in adult soft tissue sarcomas. 359 91
PALA was given iv on a weekly schedule to 32 patients with advanced malignant tumors. A course of treatment consisted of three weekly doses. Patients were treated at eight dose levels, ranging from 900 to 6750 mg/m2. Gastrointestinal toxicity (diarrhea) and skin rash were dose-limiting. No consistent
myelosuppression
occurred, and no renal or hepatic toxicity was observed. Two patients who did not have metastatic intracranial disease experienced episodes of
encephalopathy
and seizures. No major therapeutic responses were observed during this phase I trial; however minor responses (greater than or equal to 25% tumor decrease) occurred in three patients (one with adenocarcinoma of the lung and two with epidermoid carcinoma of the bladder). Doses of 4500 mg/m2/week for patients with a performance status greater than or equal to 70 and 3750 mg/m2/week for patients with a lower performance status are recommended for phase II studies.
...
PMID:Phase I trial of PALA. 747 Nov 20
Hepsulfam is a bisulfamic ester which is similar in structure to busulfan and is believed to act as a bifunctional alkylator inducing both DNA-DNA and DNA-protein crosslinks. Prior studies in patients with refractory solid tumors have identified the dose-limiting toxicity of hepsulfam to be cumulative
myelosuppression
resulting in prolonged leukopenia and thrombocytopenia. This phase I trial was designed to determine the maximally tolerated dose of hepsulfam administered intravenously in patients with refractory leukemias and other advanced hematologic malignancies. Hepsulfam was administered as a 30-min or 2-h intravenous infusion to 21 patients with advanced leukemia or multiple myeloma. All patients had been extensively treated and had progressive disease. Cycles were repeated every 5 weeks. Cohorts of patients were treated at 360, 480, 640, and 800 mg/m2. The dose-limiting toxicity of intravenous hepsulfam was severe
encephalopathy
. The single patient treated at 800 mg/m2 became comatose within 48 h and required 3 weeks for his mental status to return to baseline. There were, however, no irreversible neurological sequelae. Several patients treated at 640 mg/m2 had clinical evidence of toxic deliriums and slowing of alpha rhythm waves on electroencephalograms indicative of a gray-matter
encephalopathy
. When hepsulfam was infused over 30 min, patients complained of uncomfortable parasthesias, but when the drug was administered over 2 h, these acute symptoms were less common.
Myelosuppression
was observed in most patients. Among those patients who had some suppression of their leukemia, peripheral blood counts recovered to pretreatment levels after 3-5 weeks. Apart from CNS toxicity, non-hematologic toxicity was minimal. Pharmacokinetic studies demonstrated rapid clearance of hepsulfam so that the drug was not reliably detected in the plasma after 24 h. The recommended phase II dose of hepsulfam as a single 2-h intravenous infusion is 480 mg/m2, but this dose provided relatively little clinical benefit for patients with refractory leukemia. The dose-limiting toxicity is CNS toxicity with increasingly severe
encephalopathy
at doses > or = 640 mg/m2. It would be reasonable to investigate further dose escalation of hepsulfam in a divided dose schedule to minimize the peak concentrations which may be related to the
encephalopathy
. EEG monitoring is recommended for early detection of slowing of alpha rhythm waves. Hematopoietic stem cell support will probably be required at total doses exceeding 800 mg/m2.
...
PMID:Encephalopathy is the dose-limiting toxicity of intravenous hepsulfam: results of a phase I trial in patients with advanced hematological malignancies. 778 Nov 39
Twenty patients with advanced sarcomas entered a pilot study with ifosfamide (IF) and mercaptoethane sulfonate sodium (Mesna) as a second-line treatment for six planned cycles. All patients had received prior doxorubicin- and cyclophosphamide-based chemotherapies. IF was administered at a dose of 3 g/m2 given as continuous intravenous infusion for 24 hr on day 1-5 with Mesna. In the absence of disease progression, chemotherapy was planned to be repeated every 4 weeks for six consecutive cycles. Following chemotherapy, only 2 patients (11%) achieved partial response with response durations of 6 and 9 months. There was no complete response. When considered for only high-grade tumors, the response rate reached up to 22%. Toxicity was reported for 48 cycles and the dose-limiting toxicities were
myelosuppression
(22%) and
encephalopathy
(17%). Chemotherapy protocol was changed after two or three courses in 16 patients with stable or progressive disease. IF/Mesna chemotherapy at this dose and schedule was not found to be very promising in refractory sarcomas as a second-line chemotherapy.
...
PMID:High-dose ifosfamide by infusion with Mesna in advanced refractory sarcomas. 863 Jun 93
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