Searched for: person:muggif01
Phase I and pharmacologic evaluation of intraperitoneal 5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridine
Muggia FM; Chan KK; Russell C; Colombo N; Speyer JL; Sehgal K; Jeffers S; Sorich J; Leichman L; Beller U; et al
Intraperitoneal (i.p.) 5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridine (Floxuridine, FUdR, FdUrd) was evaluated in a phase I study at a starting level of 500 mg given on 1 day in 2 I 1.5% dialysate. Escalations within patients were allowed every other cycle. A total of 23 patients (age, 32-78 years) received 108 treatment courses. Local tolerance at all dose levels was excellent, with no cases of drug-related peritonitis being observed. Nausea and vomiting increased in severity in relation to dose and was universal at greater than 3,000 mg x 3 days. One patient each developed grade 1 mucositis as well as diarrhea at a dose of 3,000 mg x 3 days and leukopenia and thrombocytopenia at 5,000 mg x 3 days. Peritoneal fluid (PF) and plasma (PL) FdUrd profiles were monitored by an HPLC method in 13 subjects, with 7 being studied serially at 2-4 increment doses for up to 6 h. Profiles that exhibited apparent linear pharmacokinetics gave PF drug levels 2-4 logs higher than the PL counterparts, with the latter essentially declining in parallel to the former, indicating that the disposition of FdUrd from the peritoneal compartment is rate-determining. The mean terminal half-life for PF FdUrd was found to be 115 min and mean peritoneal clearance was 25 ml/min. The vast differences in drug levels and AUC found between the PF and the PL profiles suggests a high systemic clearance of FdUrd, which was confirmed in two patients receiving 2 g FdUrd by short i.v. infusion. A disproportionate increase in the plasma FdUrd levels and the corresponding AUC values was found with increasing dose, suggesting a disproportionate increase in the systemic partitioning of FdUrd when doses were escalated within a patient. Substantial levels of peritoneal 5-fluorouracil (FUra) were also detected in most of the subjects. Thus, FdUrd was found to have several desirable properties for i.p. administration: (1) a 2- to 4-log pharmacologic advantage. (2) the absence of local toxicities, and (3) a favorable antitumor spectrum and some evidence of antitumor effects in this phase I and pharmacology study. A 3,000-mg dose given in 2 1 1.5% dialysate for 3 consecutive days exhibited antitumor activity and produced no systemic toxicity except nausea and vomiting, which was controlled by antiemetics. This dose schedule is therefore recommended for phase II trials directed against small-volume disease in the peritoneal cavity, such as may be found in some stages of ovarian and gastrointestinal cancers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
PMID: 1831736
ISSN: 0344-5704
CID: 14203
ICRF-187 (ADR-529) cardioprotection against anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity: clinical and preclinical studies
Green MD; Alderton P; Sobol MM; Gross J; Muggia FM; Speyer JL
PMID: 1683780
ISSN: 0927-3042
CID: 35093
Phase II trial of carboplatin or iproplatin in cervical cancer
Lira-Puerto, V; Silva, A; Morris, M; Martinez, R; Groshen, S; Morales-Canfield, F; Tenorio, F; Muggia, F
From July 1984 to November 1987, 89 patients with recurrent measurable squamous-cell cancer of the uterine cervix were randomized in a single institution to receive treatment with either carboplatin (CBDCA) or iproplatin (CHIP). Objective response rates were similar: 2 complete regressions (CRs) and 10 partial regressions (PRs) were recorded both in the 46 evaluable patients treated with CBDCA (response rate, 26.1%; 95% confidence interval, 15-41%) and in the 40 evaluable patients treated with CHIP (response rate, 30%; 95% confidence interval, 17-47%). The median duration of response was 5.5 months for CBDCA and 6 months for CHIP; the median survival was 7.5 and 7.6 months, respectively. Both drugs were given in an outpatient setting and myelosuppression (thrombocytopenia) was the predominant toxicity. Analysis of all toxic events yielded additional interesting observations: the occurrence of moderate to severe platelet nadirs beyond cycle 1 was confined to CHIP, a higher incidence of gastrointestinal toxicity during treatment with CHIP, and five moderate to severe complaints of asthenia (recorded as neurologic events) during CHIP therapy versus only one during treatment with CBDCA. Because of its antitumor activity and its toxicologic advantage, a future role for CBDCA in the treatment of cervical cancer appears likely.
PMID: 1914084
ISSN: 0344-5704
CID: 161261
Treatment of non-small-cell lung cancer with vinblastine and very high-dose cisplatin. A Southwest Oncology Group study
Grunberg, S M; Crowley, J J; Livingston, R B; Muggia, F M; MacDonald, J S; Williamson, S K; Stephens, R L
Suggestions of a dose-response effect for cisplatin in non-small-cell lung cancer have contributed to the development of very high-dose cisplatin regimens (200 mg/m2 per cycle). We treated 53 eligible patients with metastatic or recurrent non-small-cell lung cancer with a combination of 100 mg/m2 cisplatin and 4 mg/m2 vinblastine, each given on days 1 and 8 of a 28-day cycle. We observed no complete response and 4 partial responses (8%). Median survival was 6 months. Toxicities of grade III or greater included leukopenia (11 cases), nausea/vomiting (6 cases), thrombocytopenia (2 cases), anemia (2 cases), and elevation of transaminase (1 case). Neurotoxicity has been reported to be a major problem in several other very high-dose cisplatin regimens. The low level of neurotoxicity observed in this study may be attributable to the median cumulative cisplatin dose of less than 600 mg/m2. This vinblastine/very high-dose cisplatin regimen showed minor activity against non-small-cell lung cancer. The level of activity did not surpass that of standard-dose (100 mg/m2 per cycle) cisplatin-containing regimens.
PMID: 1649706
ISSN: 0344-5704
CID: 161361
New anthracycline antitumor antibiotics
Muggia, F M; Green, M D
Doxorubicin is an essential component of the treatment of aggressive lymphoma, childhood solid tumors, bone and soft tissue sarcomas, and breast cancer and additional indications are emerging. On the other hand, daunorubicin has occupied the central position of interest in the treatment of acute leukemia. Epirubicin has a spectrum very similar to doxorubicin but lesser toxicity. The ability to protect against cardiotoxicity with ICRF-187 further enhances clinical interest in exploiting modifications in doze intensity to therapeutic advantage. Idarubicin has at least equivalent activity to daunorubicin and doxorubicin in leukemia. New areas of research in relation to anthracycline antibiotics include introduction of new the analogs, insight into mechanisms of resistance, the reversal of multidrug resistance in vitro, the protection of cardiac toxicity, and the study of other important biochemical reactions relevant to cytotoxicity. Orally active anthracyclines such as idarubicin and compounds which lack cross-resistance with the parent drugs or have other mechanisms for cytotoxicity are being developed. It is likely that these modifications will lead to an expanding therapeutic spectrum for these already widely useful drugs.
PMID: 1831987
ISSN: 1040-8428
CID: 161362
Phase II study of esorubicin (4'deoxydoxorubicin) in anthracycline naive patients with ovarian cancer
Green MD; Speyer JL; Wernz JC; Colombo N; Beller U; Muggia FM; Beckman EM
Sixteen patients with metastatic ovarian cancer who had not previously been treated with anthracyclines were treated with 4'deoxydoxorubicin at a dose of 30 mg/m2 intravenously every 3 weeks. There were no clinical responses in this group of patients. Toxicities were infrequent with neutropenia and thrombocytopenia being dose limiting. Nausea and vomiting occurred in only 4 patients. We conclude that 4'deoxydoxorubicin is an inactive drug in this patient population and does not warrant further investigation in this disease
PMID: 2272774
ISSN: 0167-6997
CID: 15690
Intraperitoneal carboplatin: favorable results in women with minimal residual ovarian cancer after cisplatin therapy
Speyer JL; Beller U; Colombo N; Sorich J; Wernz JC; Hochster H; Green M; Porges R; Muggia FM; Canetta R; et al
From August 1985 to November 1989 we conducted a trial of intraperitoneal (IP) carboplatin including a dose-escalation design in 25 women with advanced gynecologic malignancies. All had extensive prior therapy with cisplatin (median cumulative dose, 525 mg/m2). Carboplatin was administered IP in 2 L of 1.5% dextrose with a 4-hour dwell time every 4 weeks for six cycles at a starting dose of 200 mg/m2. Patients with reduced creatinine clearance (30 to 60 cc/min) were escalated more slowly than those with high (greater than 60 cc/min) clearance. Thrombocytopenia was dose-limiting and often more severe in patients with compromised renal function; there was no local drug toxicity. The median time of follow-up is 25 months. Complete responses (CRs) were documented in six of 23 assessable patients (26%) by repeat laparotomy, and an additional 11 patients (48%) had no disease evident by noninvasive restaging. Five of the CRs and six of the patients with no clinically evident disease have relapsed from 3 to 40 months after therapy. Six patients (26%) are alive and free of disease 8 to 47 (median, 20) months after therapy. IP carboplatin is effective against relapsed ovarian cancer, even after prior cisplatin therapy
PMID: 2199620
ISSN: 0732-183x
CID: 15691
Plasma carcinoembryonic antigen as an indicator of cerebral metastases [Case Report]
Eden EA; Muggia JM; Hiesiger EM; Muggia FM
Four patients in whom the plasma CEA reflected the clinical course of intracranial disease are presented. We conclude that a search to explain an elevated CEA should include the central nervous system. In addition, in selected patients with brain metastases the plasma CEA is a helpful indicator of tumor control and of its response to radiation and chemotherapy
PMID: 2358858
ISSN: 0167-594x
CID: 21718
We're "fossilized" in the optimal use of the Ommaya reservoir [Letter]
Muggia, F
PMID: 2145002
ISSN: 0890-9091
CID: 161262
Overview of cancer-related hypercalcemia: epidemiology and etiology
Muggia, F M
Hypercalcemia is one of the most serious metabolic disorders associated with cancer. The incidence and clinical circumstances associated with hypercalcemia vary in different types of cancer. Hypercalcemia is the most frequent metabolic complication of breast cancer and is usually related to widespread osteolytic metastases; however, local and systemic humoral factors mediating bone resorption have been described. In some patients with breast cancer, hypercalcemia results from treatment with estrogens, antiestrogens, androgens, or progestins. Coexisting primary hyperparathyroidism rarely confounds the diagnosis. In patients with lung cancer, the incidence of hypercalcemia varies with histology and is often unrelated to bone metastases. Hypercalcemia may occur either late or early in the disease but is seldom a presenting symptom. In patients with cancers of the head and neck region, hypercalcemia is most often associated with advanced recurrent and terminal disease, presumably humorally mediated. In renal cell carcinoma, hypercalcemia is also an adverse prognostic indicator, commonly mediated by humoral factors. On the other hand, almost all patients with multiple myeloma have extensive osteolytic bone destruction and hypercalcemia is frequently a presenting symptom. Hypercalcemia is uncommon in most lymphomas; however, it is usually a prominent feature of adult T-cell lymphomas and also occurs in some large cell, diffuse B-cell lymphomas. Awareness of the setting in which hypercalcemia of malignancy occurs will lead to its prompt diagnosis and institution of appropriate therapy.
PMID: 2185551
ISSN: 0093-7754
CID: 161363