Clin Cancer Res
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Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Phase II trial of interleukin 2, interferon alpha, and 5-fluorouracil in metastatic renal cell cancer: a cytokine working group study.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the potential efficacy of alternating two outpatient regimens for the treatment of metastatic renal cell cancer. These regimens consisted of 4 weeks of recombinant interleukin 2 (rIL-2) plus IFN-alpha2B followed by 4 weeks of 5-fluorouracil plus IFN-alpha2B. Fifty patients meeting eligibility criteria of previous Cytokine Working Group studies were treated on an outpatient basis. ⋯ The addition of 5FU/IFN failed to increase the efficacy and added new toxicity (myelosuppression). This report does not confirm the results previously reported for either alternating or simultaneous administration of these three agents. Because 5FU does not appear to add to the antitumor activity of IL-2-based therapy for renal cancer, current efforts are directed toward a Phase III randomized comparison of high-dose i.v. bolus inpatient IL-2 treatment versus treatment with outpatient s.c. injection of IL-2 plus IFN.
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Oral paclitaxel is not inherently bioavailable because of the overexpression of P-glycoprotein by intestinal cells and the significant first-pass extraction by cytochrome P450-dependent processes. This study sought to simulate the toxicological and pharmacological profile of a clinically relevant schedule of paclitaxel administered on clinically relevant i.v. dosing schedules in patients with advanced solid malignancies using oral paclitaxel administered with cyclosporin A, an inhibitor of both P-glycoprotein and P450 CYP3A. Nine patients were treated with a single course of oral paclitaxel in its parenteral formulation at a paclitaxel dose level of 180, 360, or 540 mg. ⋯ Oral paclitaxel was bioavailable in humans when administered in combination with oral cyclosporin A 5 mg/kg 1 h before and concurrently with paclitaxel treatment, and plasma paclitaxel concentrations achieved with this schedule were biologically relevant and approached concentrations attained with clinically relevant parenteral dose schedules. However, treatment of patients with oral paclitaxel using a single oral dose administration schedule failed to achieve sufficiently high systemic drug exposure and pharmacodynamic effects. In contrast, computer simulations demonstrated that clinically relevant pharmacodynamic effects are likely to be achieved with multiple once daily and twice daily oral paclitaxel-cyclosporin A dosing schedules.
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There are no satisfactory treatment options for patients with ocular melanoma metastatic to liver, and after liver metastases are identified, median survival is only between 2 and 7 months. Because liver metastases are the sole or life-limiting component of disease in the vast majority of patients who recur, we reasoned that complete vascular isolation and perfusion of the liver might result in clinically meaningful regression of disease. Between September 1994 and July 1999, 22 patients (13 women and 9 men; mean age, 49 years) with ocular melanoma metastatic to liver were treated with a 60-min hyperthermic isolated hepatic perfusion (IHP) using melphalan alone (1.5-2.5 mg/kg, n = 11) or with tumor necrosis factor (TNF, 1.0 mg, n = 11). ⋯ Overall median survival in 22 patients was 11 months. These data indicate that a single 60-min IHP can result in significant regression of advanced hepatic metastases from ocular melanoma. TNF appears to significantly prolong the duration of response.
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SR233377 is a novel thioxanthenone analogue that demonstrated solid tumor selectivity in vitro with activity confirmed in vivo against several murine tumors including those of colon, pancreas, and mammary origin. Its primary preclinical dose-limiting toxicities included myelosuppression and neurological toxicity. The neurological toxicity was acute and could be ameliorated in mice when the drug was administered as a 1-h infusion instead of rapid i.v. injection. ⋯ With this dose, prolongation of the corrected QT interval (QTc) over the pretreatment levels resulted. Because prolonged QTc is a known forerunner to acute ventricular arrhythmias, clinical development of SR233377 was stopped. However, preclinical antitumor and toxicity studies with analogues are underway with hopes of identifying a new clinical candidate with similar antitumor effects that is devoid of cardiac toxic effects.
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Clinical Trial
P53 mutational status improves estimation of prognosis in patients with curatively resected adenocarcinoma in Barrett's esophagus.
The incidence of adenocarcinomas in Barrett's esophagus has been rising in the last two decades in the United States and Western Europe for yet unknown reasons. We reported previously a large multi-institutional trial implicating p53 mutations as being involved in the pathogenesis of Barrett's cancer and representing an early marker for the malignant potential of Barrett's epithelium. A prospective study was performed to evaluate the prognostic impact of p53 mutations on survival in 59 patients with Barrett's cancer. ⋯ The presence of a p53 mutation in the tumor had a significant impact on survival after curative resections (RO-resections) with cumulative 5-year survival probabilities of 68.8+/-9.7% for mutation-negative tumors and 24.3+/-9.9% for mutation-positive tumors (log rank: P < 0.001). By Cox proportional hazard analysis, including the parameters of gender, age, Union International Contre Cancer tumor stage, grading, and p53 mutation status, only Union International Contre Cancer tumor stage (P < 0.0001) and p53 mutation status (P < 0.02) were of significant independent prognostic importance. p53 mutation analysis by DNA sequencing is of significant independent prognostic importance next to histopathological tumor stage in patients with curatively resected (RO-resection) Barrett's cancer. It appears that p53 mutational status is a valuable parameter to define low-risk (p53 mutation-negative) and high-risk (p53 mutation-positive) groups for treatment failure after curative resections.