Literature DB >> 15181605

Dose-dense chemotherapy in breast cancer and lymphoma.

Clifford A Hudis1, Norbert Schmitz.   

Abstract

Adjuvant combination chemotherapy reduces the risk of relapse and death for patients with invasive breast cancer and adds to the benefits obtained with hormonal treatment. Generally, anthracycline-containing regimens are superior to non-anthracycline regimens, treatments longer than 6 months are not advantageous and high-dose chemotherapy regimens, which require autologous hematopoietic stem cell support, have not proved consistently superior. The development and evaluation of the taxanes was highly anticipated as they have shown high levels of efficacy while appearing to be non-cross-resistant with partially non-overlapping toxicities. A role for taxanes in the adjuvant or neoadjuvant setting is now widely acknowledged, although they are not currently approved for treatment of early breast cancer in Europe. In patients with aggressive lymphoma who receive cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (CHOP) chemotherapy, 40% to 70% of patients attain a complete remission, depending on risk factors such as age and extranodal involvement. Second- and third-generation regimens like m-BACOD (methotrexate, bleomycin, cyclophosphamide, etoposide), Pro-MACE-CytaBOM (prednisone, methotrexate, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, etoposide, cytarabine, bleomycin, vincristine, methotrexate), and MACOP-B (methotrexate with leucovorin rescue, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisone, bleomycin) have largely failed to improve treatment outcome. The use of monoclonal anti-CD20 antibodies or dose escalation have shown promising results in improving relapse-free and survival rates. In patients with breast cancer, the key Cancer and Leukemia Group B 9741 trial showed that dose-dense doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, and paclitaxel chemotherapy with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), repeated every 2 weeks, is superior to the same regimen administered at standard 3-weekly intervals. In lymphoma, dose-dense CHOP chemotherapy has shown superiority over standard CHOP regimens, particularly in elderly patients with aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. G-CSF factor is essential to enable the administration of dose-dense chemotherapy and any reduction in its use leads to significant increases in infectious complications. Current evidence suggests that dose-dense chemotherapy, enabled by G-CSF, is an important breakthrough in the evolution of chemotherapy for breast cancer and lymphoma.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15181605     DOI: 10.1053/j.seminoncol.2004.04.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Semin Oncol        ISSN: 0093-7754            Impact factor:   4.929


  10 in total

1.  Embryonic stem cell-derived exosomes inhibit doxorubicin-induced TLR4-NLRP3-mediated cell death-pyroptosis.

Authors:  Zahra Tavakoli Dargani; Dinender K Singla
Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol       Date:  2019-06-07       Impact factor: 4.733

Review 2.  Epidemiology of treatment-associated mucosal injury after treatment with newer regimens for lymphoma, breast, lung, or colorectal cancer.

Authors:  Jeffrey A Jones; Elenir B C Avritscher; Catherine D Cooksley; Marisol Michelet; B Nebiyou Bekele; Linda S Elting
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2006-04-07       Impact factor: 3.603

3.  p53 status dictates responses of B lymphomas to monotherapy with proteasome inhibitors.

Authors:  Duonan Yu; Martin Carroll; Andrei Thomas-Tikhonenko
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2007-02-06       Impact factor: 22.113

4.  Influence of Alternative Tubulin Inhibitors on the Potency of a Epirubicin-Immunochemotherapeutic Synthesized with an Ultra Violet Light-Activated Intermediate: Influence of incorporating an internal/integral disulfide bond structure and Alternative Tubulin/Microtubule Inhibitors on the Cytotoxic Anti-Neoplastic Potency of Epirubicin-(C3-amide)-Anti-HER2/neu Synthesized Utilizing a UV-Photoactivated Anthracycline Intermediate.

Authors:  C P Coyne; Toni Jones; Ryan Bear
Journal:  Cancer Clin Oncol       Date:  2012-11

5.  Enhancement of intratumoral cyclophosphamide pharmacokinetics and antitumor activity in a P450 2B11-based cancer gene therapy model.

Authors:  C-S Chen; Y Jounaidi; T Su; D J Waxman
Journal:  Cancer Gene Ther       Date:  2007-09-14       Impact factor: 5.987

6.  Stem Cell-Derived Exosomes Ameliorate Doxorubicin-Induced Muscle Toxicity through Counteracting Pyroptosis.

Authors:  Fatima Bianca A Dessouki; Rakesh C Kukreja; Dinender K Singla
Journal:  Pharmaceuticals (Basel)       Date:  2020-12-09

7.  Comparison of one-week versus three-week paclitaxel for advanced pan-carcinomas: systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Shitong Lin; Ting Peng; Yifan Meng; Canhui Cao; Peipei Gao; Ping Wu; Wenhua Zhi; Ye Wei; Tian Chu; Binghan Liu; Juncheng Wei; Xiaoyuan Huang; Wencheng Ding; Cai Cheng
Journal:  Aging (Albany NY)       Date:  2022-02-26       Impact factor: 5.682

8.  Pegfilgrastim in Supportive Care of Hodgkin Lymphoma.

Authors:  Claudio Cerchione; Davide Nappi; Alessandra Romano; Giovanni Martinelli
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-08-23       Impact factor: 6.575

9.  DDX3X alleviates doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity by regulating Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway in an in vitro model.

Authors:  Dandan Feng; Jiang Li; Liang Guo; Jing Liu; Shaochen Wang; Xiuyuan Ma; Yunxuan Song; Ju Liu; Enkui Hao
Journal:  J Biochem Mol Toxicol       Date:  2022-04-25       Impact factor: 3.568

10.  Anti-Neoplastic Cytotoxicity of Gemcitabine-(C4-amide)-[anti-HER2/neu] in Combination with Griseofulvin against Chemotherapeutic-Resistant Mammary Adenocarcinoma (SKBr-3).

Authors:  C P Coyne; Toni Jones; Ryan Bear
Journal:  Med Chem (Los Angeles)       Date:  2013-05
  10 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.