Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0854467 (myelosuppression)
5,932 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Strontium-89 has been used for the treatment of painful bony metastases in patients suffering from disseminated adenocarcinoma of the prostate, with a variable proportion of patients obtaining clinically significant reductions in analgesic requirements. Based on data revealing enhancement of continuous low-dose rate irradiation by low-dose cisplatin in murine models, a protocol using 148 MBq (4 mCi) of 89Sr and 35 mg/m2 of cisplatin infused over 2 days, 1 and 4 wk after administration of the radioisotope was undertaken. Preliminary data suggest good pain relief with 55% of 18 patients entered thus far obtaining at least a 50% reduction in analgesic requirements. Improvements in total alkaline phosphatase and serum lactate dehydrogenase have consistently been seen, with some patients exhibiting improvements in hemoglobin, tumor markers and bone scans. Toxicity appears to be mild, with no life-threatening complications. In particular, myelosuppression after one course of treatment was modest, but retreatments in two patients has resulted in grade 3 hematologic toxicity. Two patients developed a "pain flare" after administration of cisplatin. Further accrual to this study will allow more accurate determination of pain response rate, and improved evaluation of parameters of objective response.
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PMID:Strontium-89 and low-dose infusion cisplatin for patients with hormone refractory prostate carcinoma metastatic to bone: a preliminary report. 163 33

A drug schedule has been devised based on a strategy of G2 blockade followed by prolonged infusion of tubulin-binding agents. The regimen consists of doxorubicin 32 mg/m2 i.v. and cyclophosphamide 320 mg/m2 i.v. on day 1 followed by vinblastine (0.3 to 1.2 mg/m2/day), cisplatin (3 to 12 mg/m2/day), and vincristine (0.04 to 0.16 mg/m2/day) by continuous intravenous infusion on days 5 to 12. Courses are repeated every 28 days. Eighteen patients with advanced solid tumors received 37 courses of chemotherapy in a pilot study to determine safe drug concentrations for the three-drug infusion for 7 days. Dose limiting toxicity was myelosuppression. Patients who received prior mitomycin-C experienced more profound thrombocytopenia than those who did not. Nonhematologic toxicities included mild nausea, vomiting, and transient elevations of serum alkaline phosphatase and serum creatinine. One patient with squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus who erroneously received vincristine 0.8 mg/m2 instead of 0.08 mg/m2 for 4 1/2 days developed transient myalgia, ileus, and a transient peripheral neuropathy; the patient achieved a sustained complete remission for 15 months and died of unrelated causes. Minor responses and stable disease were seen in two patients with renal cell carcinoma (1 and 2.5 months), three patients with colorectal carcinoma (1.5, 2, and 4 months), and one patient with squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue (2 months). The ViVACCy drug regimen can be given without undue toxicity and may be active in solid tumors.
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PMID:ViVACCy--a drug schedule based on G2 blockade and prolonged infusion of multiple tubulin-binding agents. A pilot study. 219 39

A Phase II study of the combination of etoposide (VP-16) and cyclophosphamide (CPM) was conducted in an attempt to identify active and potentially less toxic agents for treating patients with osteogenic sarcoma (OS). VP-16 was given as a 72-hour infusion for a total dose of 600 mg/m2. CPM was given as six pulses of 300 mg/m2 every 12 hours for a total dose of 1800 mg/m2. Seventeen newly diagnosed patients, including five (29%) with metastatic disease, were evaluated before and after two courses of VP-16 and CPM for clinical, radiologic, and biochemical (serum alkaline phosphatase [SAP]) responses of the primary tumor and metastases. Fifteen (88%) patients achieved complete or partial clinical responses. Fourteen (82%) patients achieved radiologic responses. Thirteen (87%) of 15 patients with higher than normal SAP levels for their age showed partial or complete responses. Three (60%) of the five patients with metastatic disease achieved complete or partial responses. The only major toxicity was myelosuppression, which led to 21 (62%) brief admissions after 34 courses of chemotherapy for intravenous antibiotic therapy for fever and neutropenia, without associated mortality. It was concluded that the combination of VP-16 and CPM is effective chemotherapy for both primary and metastatic OS. Although myelosuppression is inevitable, it is rapidly reversible in the drug dosages used. Further studies are needed to evaluate the effect of these drugs in combination with established agents in improving the disease-free survival of patients with OS.
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PMID:Response of osteogenic sarcoma to the combination of etoposide and cyclophosphamide as neoadjuvant chemotherapy. 229 54

Forty-two patients with small cell lung cancer were treated with a combination of carboplatin, ifosfamide and etoposide. Vincristine was given on day 14 of each course, the courses being repeated every 28 days for a maximum of six. Thoracic radiotherapy was given 4 weeks after the last course of chemotherapy but no prophylactic cranial radiotherapy was administered. Thirty patients had clinically limited state disease, the remaining patients having contralateral neck lymphadenopathy and/or pleural effusions. Elevated enzyme levels (alkaline phosphatase, LDH, ALT, GGT) were noted in 69% of patients. Twenty-four patients (57%) achieved a complete response (CR) when assessed one month after the end of treatment. A further 21% of patients had a partial response (PR). Median duration of CR was 14 months and of PR 8 months. Cerebral metastases were the sole site of relapse in 13% of the CR patients. Myelosuppression was severe with a median nadir of neutropenia of 0.2 x 10(9) cells 1-1. However, 74% of the patient group received all six courses of chemotherapy and only 16 courses (7%) were delayed because of toxicity. There were three deaths associated with treatment-related neutropenia. The median survival of the total group was 14 months, with an actuarial 2 year survival of 37% and a minimum follow-up of 18 months. [A recent analysis, March 1989, demonstrated a 33%, 2 year actual survival.]
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PMID:Carboplatin, ifosfamide and etoposide with mid-course vincristine and thoracic radiotherapy for 'limited' stage small cell carcinoma of the bronchus. 255 90

Most cancerocidal agents have myelosuppression as their major toxicity. In some clinical studies it has been possible to show a relationship between the amount of administered drug and the therapeutic efficacy. Within any defined protocol, however, there may be much variability in the severity of myelosuppression. We attempted to determine whether the tumor response might be related to this toxicity. We evaluated a total of 177 patients with small cell bronchogenic carcinoma, treated by five successive regimens of combination chemotherapy, consisting of either cyclophosphamide and vincristine alone or with doxorubicin or doxorubicin plus bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) or doxorubicin plus methotrexate, for a number of prognostic factors (age, sex, extent of disease, performance status, sites and number of metastases, serum LDH and alkaline phosphatase, weight loss, leukopenia, and thrombopenia). Leukopenia (mean 415 +/- 478/mm3, range 0-2000/mm3) had a weak influence on the incidence of complete remission, which was highest with the least severe nadir (P = 0.027). Thrombopenia was a nonsignificant factor (P = 0.738). Both leukopenia and thrombocytopenia had no influence on the overall survival. Because these drug combinations were based on cyclophosphamide, which requires metabolic activation, we evaluated the relationship of myelosuppression and the incidence of response in a second group of patients with small cell bronchogenic carcinoma treated with a VP16, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine sulfate protocol. In this analysis, no relationship could be detected between remission and myelosuppression. Granulocytopenia or thrombocytopenia also-showed no significant influence on the achievement of long-term survival beyond 36 months.
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PMID:Relationship between myelosuppression and chemotherapeutic response in small cell bronchogenic carcinoma. 298 16

Brachytherapy by embolization with radiotherapeutic microspheres following intraarterial infusion of a radiosensitizer represents an attempt to combine several selective modalities into a more potent, focused attack on regionally confined tumors. In pursuit of this goal, we examined the ability of foxhounds with surgically implanted hepatic arterial (HA) delivery systems to tolerate a clinically relevant dosage of HA yttrium-90 (Y-90) by microsphere administration either alone or preceded by a 28-day constant HA infusion of either 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BUDR) or a control solution. Five dogs received BUDR (10 mg/kg/day) and five a control buffer infusion for 28 days immediately prior to the administration of Y-90-coated 15 micron resin microspheres (equivalent of 5000 rads to the entire liver) to each dog on day 31. In all animals, blood counts, bilirubin, amylase, appetite, weight, and behavior remained unchanged. Dogs receiving the microspheres after buffer infusion alone exhibited no hepatic enzyme alanine aminotransferase or alkaline phosphatase elevation. Alanine aminotransferase and alkaline phosphatase levels both rose during the third week of BUDR infusion, and while subsequent microsphere administration further increased enzyme levels, these levels had largely normalized by necropsy on day 82. At necropsy, the type and degree of hepatic toxicity among the animals receiving radioactive microspheres was comparable to that previously described in patients receiving external beam hepatic irradiation at conventional doses (2000-3000 rads). Also noted was a radiation-induced cholecystitis (due in large part to the gallbladder's total reliance on the hepatic artery for blood supply). One resin microsphere dog exhibited a small quantity of microspheres in the lungs causing focal radiation-induced granulomas suggesting the need to assess shunting of microspheres through the liver in clinical studies. Thus, HA Y-90 microspheres with BUDR can produce acceptable, nonlethal, and tolerable toxicities in this dog model suggesting that clinical studies of this combination are not likely to be contraindicated by synergistic toxicity. Although HA BUDR did not contribute significantly to the toxicity of the Y-90 microspheres, HA BUDR by itself administered uninterrupted for 4 weeks may, like HA FUDR (clinically), cause chemical hepatitis/cholangitis. The unexpected fragmentation of the resin spheres (albeit without myelosuppression) has led us to begin studies with a recently developed nondisruptible glass microsphere (ThereSphere) in which the Y-90 is part of the glass matrix and cannot leach.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Effects of hepatic arterial yttrium-90 microsphere administration alone and combined with regional bromodeoxyuridine infusion in dogs. 358 Oct 69

Diaziquone (AZQ), a new lipid-soluble antitumor agent, was given by 15-30-minute infusion on a daily X 5 schedule to 47 children with refractory solid tumors and leukemia. The starting daily dose of 6 mg/m2 was escalated to 10 and 35 mg/m2 in patients with solid tumors and leukemia, respectively. In patients with solid tumors, myelosuppression was dose-limiting at a daily dose of 10 mg/m2. In patients with leukemia, prolonged pancytopenia and bone marrow hypoplasia were observed at daily doses greater than or equal to 25 mg/m2. At these higher doses, significant hyperbilirubinemia associated with sepsis was also seen. Corresponding increases of transaminases or alkaline phosphatase and significant hemolysis were not noted. The maximum tolerated dose for this daily dose schedule was 9 mg/m2 in children with solid tumors and 25 mg/m2 in children with relapsed leukemia. Responses to AZQ included stabilization of disease in osteosarcoma, neurofibrosarcoma, pinealoma, and ependymoma. A patient with juvenile chronic myelocytic leukemia in blast crisis converted back to the chronic phase. A patient with acute lymphoblastic leukemia had a substantial decrease in cerebrospinal fluid blast count. Bone marrow aplasia was achieved in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia and acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia; however, remissions were not achieved. A phase II study of AZQ in children with refractory malignancies is now being performed by the Childrens Cancer Study Group.
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PMID:Phase I clinical evaluation of diaziquone in childhood cancer. 385 80

In vitro studies of certain lymphoid tumor cells show potentiation of 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine (ara-C) effects by uridine because it elevates intracellular uridine triphosphate, resulting in increased ara-C triphosphate levels. Seven-day continuous i.v. infusions of uridine at 123 mg/kg/h (2.5 g/sq m/h) were studied in 5 male beagles. Steady state levels of uridine were reached within 4 to 6 h and ranged from 2 to 5 X 10(-4) M over the course of the infusion. Steady state uracil levels ranged from 4 to 10 X 10(-4) M. After the end of infusion, uridine and uracil levels fell with a half-life of approximately 15 and 18 min, respectively. Toxicity in 2 dogs treated at this dose was limited to minimal diarrhea and a transient rise of alkaline phosphatase to 2 to 3 times normal. No drug toxicity was evident at sacrifice on Days 7 or 72. Three dogs received a 7-day infusion of ara-C plus uridine followed approximately 4 weeks later by an infusion of ara-C alone (or the same drugs in the reverse sequence). Coinfusion of 2.5 or 5.0 mg/kg/day (50 or 100 mg/sq m/day) of ara-C had no significant effects on uridine plasma levels or postinfusion half-lives. Similarly, no consistent effect was seen of uridine on ara-C plasma levels. Uridine coinfusion with ara-C resulted in a definite potentiation of myelosuppression; at 5.0 mg/kg/day X 7 of ara-C white blood cell and platelet nadirs (X 10(3)/microliters) were 0.8 and 15 as compared to 3.6 and 66, respectively, with ara-C alone. One-third of the dogs developed reversibly elevated transaminases with the combination treatment. The results show that a minimally toxic dose of uridine enhances bone marrow and probably hepatic toxicity of coadministered ara-C.
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PMID:Pharmacology and toxicology of a seven-day infusion of 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine plus uridine in dogs. 398 95

Fifty-seven patients with refractory acute leukemia were treated with high-dose cytosine arabinoside to establish the maximum tolerated dose and duration and to determine the antileukemic activity. The maximum tolerated regimen was found to be 3 g/sq m every 12 hr for 6 days. At this dose, nonhematologic toxicity was limited to conjunctivitis in approximately half of the patients, and liver toxicity (transient elevations in transaminase, alkaline phosphatase, or bilirubin) was frequently observed, but neither was dose-limiting. Extending the duration of treatment to 8 days resulted in excessive diarrhea and skin toxicity (painful erythema with bullae), while increasing the dose to 4.5 g/sq m q. 12 hr for 6 days resulted in severe cerebellar toxicity. Myelosuppression was severe, but was not related to the intensity of treatment; granulocyte recovery occurred a median of 28 days (range 22-40 days) after initiating therapy, and platelet recovery occurred after a median of 25 days (range 16-41 days). Antileukemic activity was evaluable in the 46 patients who survived at least 3 wk. Complete remissions were obtained in 1 of 6 patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) in accelerated phase and 1 of 3 acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients. A more detailed analysis of response was possible for the 37 evaluable patients with acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia: 70% of these patients responded, with 51% complete remissions. The median unmaintained response was 4 mo (range 2-26+ mo). The complete response rate was higher in patients who received at least 12 doses of high-dose cytosine arabinoside compared to shorter regimens [17/28 (61%) versus 2/9 (22%), p less than 0.05]. Resistance to cytosine arabinoside in conventional doses was documented in 11 patients, 5 of whom responded (2 complete remissions) to high-dose regimens. We conclude that high-dose cytosine arabinoside in the maximally tolerated regimen of 3 g/sq m every 12 hr for 6 days has substantial antileukemic activity in patients refractory to standard therapy. Durable unmaintained remissions can be achieved, even in patients who fail to respond to cytosine arabinoside in conventional doses.
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PMID:High-dose cytosine arabinoside therapy for refractory leukemia. 622 74

Thirty-five patients with advanced cancers were treated with estramustine phosphate tablets (Estracyt). Doses ranged between 420 mg and 700 mg daily. One partial response was documented in a hormone resistant prostatic cancer patient. Four minor responses (less than 50% responses, or less than one month more than 50% response) were obtained; one in a hormone resistant prostatic cancer, two in metastatic colorectal cancers; and another in a malignant melanoma. Toxicity phenomena included nausea (9/35 - 25%), water retention (4/35 - 11.5%) and mild elevation of alkaline phosphatase (2/35 - 6%). Other toxicity effects were vaginal bleeding in two women, acne in one woman and mild pruritus in another patient. Myelosuppression and immune suppression were not significantly detected.
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PMID:Oral estramustine phosphate (Estracyt): a broad phase II study. 659 4


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