Clin Cancer Res
-
Platinum-DNA adducts can be assayed in peripheral blood leukocytes by means of atomic absorption spectroscopy and ELISA, and high adduct levels have been correlated previously with favorable clinical response to platinum-based chemotherapy. Our purpose was to study adduct formation in peripheral blood leukocytes by means of a new method, inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy (ICP-MS), and to correlate adduct formation with clinical response and toxicity. Platinum (Pt)-DNA adducts were measured by means of ICP-MS in leukocytes of 66 patients receiving a cisplatin- or carboplatin-based chemotherapy, collected either before the beginning of treatment and incubated in vitro with cisplatin or 1 and 24 h after the administration of drug to the patient. ⋯ No differences in adduct levels (mean +/- SD) were evident between patients responsive (3.23 +/- 3.51 fmol/microgram DNA) and nonresponsive (2.34 +/- 3.01 fmol/microgram DNA) to chemotherapy. In the homogeneous group of patients treated with combination of cisplatin and 5FU, received dose intensity, hemoglobin decrease, and posttreatment creatinine could not be linked with the extent of leukocyte adduct formation. The data presented here demonstrate that ICP-MS allows the detection of adducts in patients treated with cisplatin or carboplatin and suggest that adduct formation in leukocytes is not a major determinant of response or toxicity.
-
Clinical Trial
Phase I clinical and pharmacokinetic study of carzelesin (U-80244) given daily for five consecutive days.
Carzelesin (U-80244), one of the synthetic DNA minor groove binding cyclopropylpyrroloindole analogues, was selected for clinical development because of its high potency, promising antitumor activity in murine solid tumors and leukemia, and significant therapeutic efficacy against colon and rhabdomyosarcoma xenografts. In this Phase I study, carzelesin was given daily for 5 consecutive days to (a) determine the maximum tolerable dose (MTD) and the pattern of toxicity of this schedule; (b) define the pharmacokinetic profile of the parent, as was done for the intermediate compound U-76073 and the DNA-reactive agent U-76074; and (c) document any antitumor activity observed. Carzelesin was given as a 10-min infusion with a constant-rate infusion pump. ⋯ An 8-month partial remission was reported in one previously untreated patient with hepatocellular carcinoma at 40 microgram/m2. The MTD was fixed at 40 microgram/m2 daily; 35 and 30 microgram/m2 are the daily doses recommended for Phase II studies in good- and poor-risk patients. The daily regimen for 5 days seems to offer no advantage over the single intermittent schedule that has been selected for the Phase II program in Europe.
-
Clinical Trial
Phase I trial of intravenous carboplatin and cyclosporin A in refractory gynecologic cancer patients.
Our objective was to determine the maximum tolerated dose of cyclosporin A (CsA) delivered as a loading dose (LD) and continuous i.v. infusion (CI) in combination with carboplatin in patients with refractory gynecologic cancers. Twenty-nine heavily pretreated patients (25 ovarian epithelial, 2 cervical, and 2 endometrial carcinomas) received 113 cycles of CsA and carboplatin from September 1989 to September 1991. Twenty-four of these 29 carcinomas were strictly defined to be platinum resistant. ⋯ However, because CsA is used in this trial as a chemosensitizer in platinum-sensitive tumors and as a chemomodulator of platinum resistance, we targeted a CsA concentration of >1.0 microgram/ml, which was achieved. The CsA dose recommended for a Phase II trial of this combination is 10 mg/kg LD and 11.6 mg/kg/day CI, which results in blood CsA concentrations ranging from 1.2 to 1.3 microgram/ml over 12 h. Responses in this population of refractory gynecologic cancer patients are unusual, and these encouraging results form the basis for a Phase II trial of this combination.
-
Our objective was to assess the activity of cyclosporin A (CsA) used as a chemomodulator of carboplatin in refractory ovarian and fallopian tube cancer patients. Fifty-one patients (47 epithelial ovarian, 1 ovarian mixed mesodermal tumor, and 3 fallopian tube carcinomas) were enrolled in a prospective Phase II trial of CsA and carboplatin. CsA was infused as a loading dose of 10 mg/kg over 5 h, followed by carboplatin infused over 30 min at an AUC of 6 mg/ml x min, then a 24-h continuous infusion of 11.6 mg/kg CsA. ⋯ Hypertension, which responded to medications, was seen in 18% of the patients during the CsA infusion. We concluded that this CsA/carboplatin regimen is active in potentially platinum-sensitive patients and compares well with the expected response rate of 30% in patients with a platinum-free interval <24 months who are retreated with platinum. Moreover, this regimen had modest but real activity in platinum-resistant patients.
-
Wild-type p53 gene transfer into the SW620 colorectal carcinoma cell line was performed using the replication-defective adenovirus Ad5/CMV/p53 to evaluate the effect of wild-type p53 expression on radiation sensitivity. The results indicated that infection with Ad5/CMV/p53 sensitized the cells. The survival at 2 Gy was reduced from 55 to 23%. ⋯ A significant enhancement of tumor growth suppression by this combination strategy was observed in a s. c. tumor animal model compared to p53 gene therapy alone. The delay in regrowth to control tumor size of 1000 mm3 was 2 days for 5 Gy, 15 days for Ad5/CMV/p53, and 37 days for Ad5/CMV/p53 + 5 Gy, indicating synergistic interactions. These data indicate that the delivery of wild-type p53 to cells with p53 mutations increases their radiation sensitivity, and this may be accomplished by adenoviral-mediated gene therapy.