Literature DB >> 11474256

Phase I clinical trial of weekly combined topotecan and irinotecan.

J Lokich1.   

Abstract

Combining antineoplastic analogues may increase efficacy by increasing the serum and intracellular concentration of the cytotoxic moiety shared by the analogues. Topotecan and irinotecan are two camptothecan analogues that are active in different human tumors (topotecan in ovary; irinotecan in colon) and in different experimental tumor systems. These data suggest that different mechanisms of drug resistance may be operative for the two agents, and if incomplete cross-resistance exists between analogues, concomitant administration may be advantageous. The objectives of this phase I study were 1) to determine in a phase trial design whether topotecan and irinotecan administered concomitantly on a weekly schedule can be delivered at the same dose intensity as that of single-agent topotecan or irinotecan delivery; and 2) to determine whether hematologic and/or nonhematologic toxicity is increased with topotecan and irinotecan administered together as a prelude to a possible phase II trial in responsive tumor categories. Irinotecan was administered for 30 to 45 minutes weekly x 4 at four dose levels: 50, 75, 100, and 125 mg/m(2)/wk. Topotecan was administered for 30 minutes (after irinotecan administration) at two dose levels within each of the irinotecan dose levels (1.0 and 1.5 mg/m(2)). Concomitant single-dose granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) was used for leukocyte counts between 1,000 cells/mm(3) and 3,500 cells/mm(3) to maintain schedule. Maximum tolerated dosage (MTD) for the topotecan and irinotecan combination was defined as that which permitted 4 weeks of topotecan and irinotecan administration with G-CSF at or near the dose intensity reported for each single agent. Twenty-one patients received 32 4-week cycles. Dose-limiting toxicity was hematologic with grade IV leukopenia and neutropenia occurring at all dose levels. There was no apparent increase in the diarrhea syndrome associated with irinotecan. The MTD for irinotecan (at 125 mg/m(2)/wk) is the same MTD as with single-agent irinotecan use. The MTD for concomitant topotecan (1.5 mg/m(2)/wk) is 60% of the single-agent topotecan dose for the 5-day topotecan schedule (at 2.5 mg/m(2)/wk) but only 30% of the single-agent topotecan dose for the weekly schedule (5 mg/m(2)/wk). The topoisomerase I inhibitor dose is increased minimally when the analogues are administered concomitantly on a weekly schedule. Comparative trials of single-agent topotecan and irinotecan versus the combination of topotecan and irinotecan would be necessary to provide the proof of principle that combining analogues can increase therapeutic effectiveness.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11474256     DOI: 10.1097/00000421-200108000-00003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Clin Oncol        ISSN: 0277-3732            Impact factor:   2.339


  2 in total

1.  Dose-finding design for multi-drug combinations.

Authors:  Nolan A Wages; Mark R Conaway; John O'Quigley
Journal:  Clin Trials       Date:  2011-06-07       Impact factor: 2.486

2.  Dose finding with drug combinations in cancer phase I clinical trials using conditional escalation with overdose control.

Authors:  Mourad Tighiouart; Steven Piantadosi; André Rogatko
Journal:  Stat Med       Date:  2014-05-13       Impact factor: 2.373

  2 in total

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