| Literature DB >> 10682659 |
C Corsini1, M Ghielmini, P Mancuso, F Tealdo, M Paolucci, M Zucchetti, P F Ferrucci, E Cocorocchio, M Mezzetti, A Mori, M Riggi, M D'Incalci, G Martinelli.
Abstract
We evaluated in vitro the toxicity of idarubicin and its active metabolite idarubicinol on haematopoietic progenitors, using human umbilical cord blood and peripheral blood progenitors to obtain dose-response curves. We treated 16 patients with poor prognosis lymphoma in a phase I-II trial of high-dose idarubicin and melphalan and investigated if idarubicinol persisting in patients' plasma at the time of transplantation (day 0), on day +1 and +2 could result in an inhibition of infused progenitors. Colony inhibition was correlated with pharmacokinetic data and with the time of patients' engraftment. Plasma samples obtained before idarubicin treatment demonstrated a colony-stimulating effect, increasing the cloning efficiency by 72%. The inhibitory activity on colony forming unit granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM) of patients' plasma collected on the day of transplantation was lower than expected from dose-response curves (21% measured vs 70% expected). The time to patients' WBC and PLT recovery correlated with the amount of CD34+ cells reinfused and, to a lesser extent, with the colony-inhibiting effect of patients' plasma. The correlation between idarubicinol concentration and CFU-GM inhibition was not significant. These data suggest that plasma drug concentration on the day of stem cell reinfusion may overestimate the toxicity of residual anthracyclines to the transplanted cells.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 10682659 PMCID: PMC2363340 DOI: 10.1054/bjoc.1999.0957
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640