| Literature DB >> 15841076 |
X M Li1, K Tanaka, J Sun, E Filipski, L Kayitalire, C Focan, F Lévi.
Abstract
The relevance of gemcitabine timing for chronotherapeutic optimisation was investigated. Healthy mice received multiple doses of gemcitabine (120, 160 or 200 mg kg(-1) injection (inj)(-1)) at one of six circadian times (3, 7, 11, 15, 19 or 23 h after light onset--HALO) on days 1, 4, 7 and 10 or a single dose of gemcitabine (400 mg kg(-1)) at 11 or 23 HALO+/-cisplatin (5 mg kg(-1) at 1 min, 4 or 8 h later). Mice bearing Glasgow osteosarcoma received multiple doses of gemcitabine (200 mg kg(-1) inj(-1)) at 11 or 23 HALO+/-cisplatin (5 mg kg(-1) inj(-1) at 1 min or 4 h later) on days of 10, 13, 16 and 19 following tumour inoculation. A circadian rhythm in body weight loss was statistically validated, with 1030 HALO corresponding to the least toxic time (95% CL, 0800 to 1300). Gemcitabine dosing produced least body weight loss and least neutropenia after injection at 11 vs 23 HALO, whether the drug was given alone or with cisplatin (P=0.001). Gemcitabine-cisplatin tolerability was improved by dosing gemcitabine at 11 HALO and CDDP at 15 HALO (P<0.001). The administration of this schedule to tumour-bearing mice increased median survival three-fold as compared to treatments where both drugs were given simultaneously at 11 or 23 HALO (P=0.02). The optimal schedule would correspond to the delivery of gemcitabine upon awakening and cisplatin near mid-activity in cancer patients.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15841076 PMCID: PMC2362038 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6602564
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Body weight change relative to pretreatment value (mean±s.e.m.) in healthy B6D2F1 mice receiving gemcitabine (↓) on days 1, 4, 7 and 10 at one of six circadian times. Circadian times are expressed in hours after light onset (HALO). (A) Body weight change as a function of gemcitabine timing over 2 weeks following treatment onset at one of three dose levels (120, 160 or 200 mg kg−1 inj−1) (P from two-way ANOVA<0.001 for effects of dose and circadian time). (B) Body weight change at nadir as a function of dose and dosing time.
Body weight loss and extent of neutropenia at nadir according to gemcitabine dosing time, whether the drug was given alone or combined with CDDP in healthy mice, irrespective of interval between drugs
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| Body weight loss (%) | Single agent | 1.9±0.7 | 6.4±2.4 |
| Combined with CDDP | 6.8±1.0 | 7.9±0.8 | |
| Neutrophil count (cells mm−3) | Single agent | 386±24 | 250±25 |
| Combined with CDDP | 365±28 | 224±28 | |
Figure 2Body weight change relative to pretreatment value (mean±s.e.m.) in healthy mice over the week following a single treatment with gemcitabine (400 mg kg−1) and CDDP (5 mg kg−1). Gemcitabine was given at 11 or 23 HALO and CDDP was administered 1 min, 4 h or 8 h after eight gemcitabine timing (P from two-way ANOVA=0.001 for circadian time effect and <0.001 for interval effect).
Figure 3Survival curves of GOS-bearing mice receiving gemcitabine (200 mg kg−1 inj−1) combined with CDDP (5 mg kg−1 inj−1) 10, 13, 16 and 19 after tumour inoculation. Gemcitabine was given at 11 or 23 HALO and CDDP was injected 1 min or 4 h after gemcitabine timing (P from log rank=0.02). BW: body weight.