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Query: UMLS:C0854467 (
myelosuppression
)
5,932
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Methylglyoxal bis (guanylhydrazone) (
MGBG
) is an inhibitor of polyamine synthesis. In vitro studies demonstrate the accumulation of some tumor cells in S and G2 phases of the cell cycle. Nineteen patients with advanced head and neck cancer were entered in a Phase II trial of
MGBG
.
MGBG
, 500 mg/M2, was administered as a brief intravenous infusion weekly for 4 weeks, then every 2 weeks. Dose modifications were based on cumulative toxicity after 2 weekly treatments. All but three patients had prior exposure to chemotherapy for disease recurrence. Of 17 patients evaluable for response and toxicity, one brief partial response was observed. The most common toxicities were mild to moderate nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and stomatitis.
Myelosuppression
occurred in three patients. Dose modifications were required in four patients; a maximum dose of 700 mg/M2 was tolerated. The results of four other Phase II single and combination chemotherapy trials of
MGBG
in head and neck cancer are reviewed. The single agent response rate in 59 patients was 22% (range, 6%-41%). The poor response rate observed in this trial was similar to that in other trials in which a heavily pretreated group of patients was evaluated. It is concluded that single agent
MGBG
is not a useful drug in heavily pretreated recurrent disease patients. However, because of its biochemical effects, further testing in combination with cycle specific agents and in larger numbers of patients with minimal prior treatment may be warranted.
...
PMID:Phase II trial of methylglyoxal bis (guanylhydrazone) (MGBG) in advanced head and neck cancer. 377 8
Patients with advanced lymphoma who relapse from intensive first-line combination chemotherapy generally have a very poor prognosis. The use of investigational drugs which lack cross-resistance to agents commonly used for initial therapy represents an important approach to the management of such patients. Based upon our prior experience, we developed a protocol which employed a combination of three new agents.
Mitoguazone
(600 mg/m2) was administered on Days 1 and 10; etoposide (100-125 mg/m2) was administered on Days 2, 3, and 4; and gallium nitrate (300 mg/m2/day) was administered as a continuous iv infusion over 24 hours on Days 1-7. Treatment cycles were repeated every 3-4 weeks pending tolerance to toxic reactions. Forty-two patients are evaluable for response (35 with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and seven with Hodgkin's disease). All patients had received extensive prior treatment (median of two previous chemotherapy regimens). Less than one-half of patients had achieved complete remission (CR) with previous therapy. Twenty-two patients (52%) showed major antitumor responses (five CR, 17 partial). All patients who achieved CR had diffuse large cell lymphoma. Two patients in CR relapsed in the CNS. The median duration of response for patients who achieved partial response was 4 months (range, 1-11+). Major toxic reactions included
myelosuppression
, optic neuritis, mucositis, and corneal keratitis or conjunctivitis. This combination of experimental agents has major therapeutic activity in patients with advanced, resistant lymphoma. Optimal application of these drugs may be obtained by use as one arm of an intensive program of alternating non-cross-resistant regimens.
...
PMID:Salvage chemotherapy of advanced lymphoma with investigational drugs: mitoguazone, gallium nitrate, and etoposide. 379 Dec 68
Methylglyoxal-bis(guanylhydrazone) (
MGBG
), an inhibitor of polyamine synthesis, was administered to 35 patients with hormone-resistant advanced adenocarcinoma of the prostate in doses of 500 or 600 mg/m2 per week intravenously. Of 31 patients with bidimensional measurable soft-tissue lesions, 25 had an adequate trial, defined as four or more doses. Six (24%; 95% confidence limits, 8% to 32%) patients achieved a partial remission (greater than or equal to 50% reduction in tumor size) in soft-tissue disease. Response was noted to start after one to two doses and persisted for a median of three months (range, 1 to 4 months). Toxicity was tolerable, and significant
myelosuppression
was not observed. The lack of response in osseous metastases may be secondary to the short duration of remission or to the presence or inducibility of the enzyme ornithine decarboxylase in bone. Since some animal prostatic cancer tumor models are sensitive to cytotoxic drugs that produce polyamine inhibition, clinical trials of
MGBG
combined with other inhibitors of the polyamine pathway should be explored.
...
PMID:Methylglyoxal-bis(guanylhydrazone) in hormone-resistant adenocarcinoma of the prostate. 396 52
We treated 45 patients with advanced malignant lymphoma, using a combination of methyl-GAG and teniposide (VM-26). All patients had received extensive prior treatment with combination chemotherapy with or without irradiation. Both methyl-GAG (600 mg/m2) and VM-26 (100 mg/m2) were administered on Days 1 and 8 of the treatment protocol and, in responding patients, every 2 weeks thereafter. Partial responses occurred in six of 12 patients with Hodgkin's disease and in ten of 31 patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. The median duration of response for all patients was 3 1/2 months (range, 1 1/2-11). There were moderate toxic effects, including nausea, myalgia, weakness, and
myelosuppression
. Relative to our recent experience with methyl-GAG as a single agent, the addition of VM-26 to methyl-GAG did not produce a superior rate or duration of response in similar, heavily pretreated patient populations with malignant lymphoma; however, the combination caused considerably more myelotoxicity. We conclude that the use of VM-26 with methyl-GAG in this dose schedule offers no advantage over single-agent therapy.
Methyl-GAG
, when administered on a biweekly schedule, is effective and well-tolerated. This agent should be considered for incorporation into chemotherapy protocols for the therapy of previously untreated patients with malignant lymphoma.
...
PMID:Combination chemotherapy for patients with relapsed malignant lymphoma using methyl-GAG and teniposide (VM-26). 704 33
Broad phase II trial of methylglyoxal-bi (guanylhydrazone) (
MGBG
) is under way at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. Studies in renal cell carcinoma, lymphomas, and non-small-cell lung cancer are completed, and substantial numbers of patients with esophageal and head and neck cancer have been treated. Small numbers of patients with other solid tumors have also been entered into the study.
MGBG
has significant antineoplastic activity against lymphomas, with 16/40 heavily pretreated patients (40%) having partial remissions (PR) lasting 1 to 8+ months.
MGBG
has also demonstrated more modest activity in non-small-cell lung cancer, esophageal, and head and neck carcinoma; it appears to have little or no therapeutic value in renal cell cancer. Toxicities have been manageable, and included mild nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, mucositis, and
myelosuppression
. The dose-limiting toxicity, seen most frequently in those patients with impaired renal function, was lethargy and fatigue.
MGBG
has demonstrated activity in lymphomas, lung, esophageal, and head and neck cancer. Further trials of this agent are indicated, both alone and in combination.
...
PMID:Phase II trials of methylglyoxal-bis (guanylhydrazone). 704 14
Methyl-GAG
was given to 71 patients with advanced malignancies as a weekly brief infusion (30-120 minutes) or as a biweekly 24- or 120-hour infusion. Mucositis (stomatitis, pharyngitis, esophagitis, and, rarely, inflammation of other mucous membranes) was dose-limiting in all three schedules. Generalized fatigue, malaise, myalgia, dysesthesias, nausea, and vomiting were more frequent in the brief-infusion schedule.
Myelosuppression
was mild and not dose-related. Fever, ventricular arrhythmias, skin rash, tender swelling of the palms, neuropathy, and paralytic ileus were rare. Toxicity was increased in patients with renal insufficiency or "third-space" fluid but was not increased by hepatic dysfunction. Cumulative and overlapping toxicity was evident only in the weekly schedule. Higher doses of methyl-GAG were tolerated when the duration of infusion was increased. The recommended doses for phase II trials are 700 mg/m2 weekly as a 1-2 hour infusion, 850 mg/m2/24 hours biweekly, and 1500 mg/m2/120 hours biweekly. Therapeutic effects were seen in all schedules and included objective responses in colon carcinoma (one of 13 patients), renal cell carcinoma (one of nine), and Hodgkin's lymphoma (one of two) and objective improvements in esophageal carcinoma (one of three), endometrial carcinoma (two of two), and leiomyosarcoma (one of three).
...
PMID:Methyl-GAG in patients with malignant neoplasms: a phase I re-evaluation. 705 68
Thirty-four assessable patients with advanced squamous cell and adenocarcinoma of the lung were treated with weekly
MGBG
in a phase II trial. Only one partial response, in adenocarcinoma, was observed.
Myelosuppression
was mild to moderate. Major toxicities consisted of myalgia, myopathy, mucositis, gastrointestinal and pronounced vasculitis in one patient. It would appear that
MGBG
does not have sufficient antitumor activity to warrant further investigation in advanced squamous cell and adenocarcinoma of the lung.
...
PMID:Phase II trial of methyl-GAG (NSC-32946) in squamous cell and adenocarcinoma of the lung. 716 5
Methylglyoxalbisguanylhydrazone or
MGBG
is an agent with a unique mechanism of action (polyamine biosynthesis inhibition).
MGBG
was discarded in the 1960s because of severe mucositis and other toxicities. New clinical trials in the late 1970s and early 1980s utilized weekly administration and indicated
MGBG
had significant activity in patients with chemotherapy-refractory Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. In addition, some activity was noted in patients with head and neck, prostate, esophageal, and endometrial cancer. The toxicities on the weekly schedule were minimal and no
myelosuppression
was noted. Based on
MGBG
's spectrum of antitumor activity and its activity in severely debilitated patients, we hypothesize that
MGBG
may have greater antitumor activity in patients who are malnourished (possibly based on polyamine depletion).
MGBG
is a good candidate for treatment of AIDS-associated NHL because it has proven activity in patients with NHL which is not associated with AIDS, crosses the blood brain barrier, is non-myelosuppressive, and appears to work in patients with inanition (no polyamines available to reverse
MGBG
's antitumor effects). Clinical trials are ongoing to determine the activity of
MGBG
in AIDS-associated NHL and other diseases. Based on encouraging initial results, it appears
MGBG
may become part of our therapeutic armamentarium.
...
PMID:MGBG: teaching an old drug new tricks. 791 20
Mitoguazone
is a unique chemotherapeutic agent whose activity is believed to result primarily from the competitive inhibition of S-adenosyl-methionine decarboxylase leading to a disruption in polyamine biosynthesis. Initial clinical trials demonstrated that the dose-limiting toxicities (mucositis and
myelosuppression
) of
Mitoguazone
were both dose and schedule dependent. Early pharmacokinetic studies of
Mitoguazone
in man revealed a prolonged half-life. Concurrent with a recent Phase II trial of
Mitoguazone
in patients with AIDS related non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, the single dose pharmacokinetics of
Mitoguazone
were characterized. Twelve patients received 600 mg/m2 of intravenous
Mitoguazone
over 30 minutes on an intermittent every 2 week schedule. Blood, urine, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), pleural fluid and tissue samples were collected and analyzed by HPLC.
Mitoguazone
was cleared from the plasma triexponentially with a harmonic mean terminal half-life of 175 hours and a mean residence time of 192 hours. Peak plasma levels occurred immediately post-infusion, ranged from 6.47 to 42.8 micrograms/ml, and remained (for an extended period) well above the reported concentration for inhibition of polyamine biosynthesis. Plasma clearance averaged 4.73 l/hr/m2 with a relatively large apparent volume of distribution at steady-state of 1012 l/m2 indicating tissue sequestration. Renal excretion of unchanged
Mitoguazone
accounted for an average of 15.8% of the dose within 48 to 72 hours post-administration. Detectable levels of drug were present in random voided samples eight days post-dose.
Mitoguazone
levels in CSF ranged from 22 to 186 ng/ml post-dose with CSF/plasma ratios ranging from 0.6% to 7%. The pleural fluid/plasma ratio was approximately 1. Tissue levels of
Mitoguazone
were highest in the liver followed by lymph node, spleen and the brain.
...
PMID:Pharmacokinetic profile of Mitoguazone (MGBG) in patients with AIDS related non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 891 46