| Literature DB >> 21547093 |
Francesco Patti1, Salvatore Lo Fermo.
Abstract
Cyclophosphamide (cy) is an alkylating agent used to treat malignancies and immune-mediated inflammatory nonmalignant processes. It has been used as a treatment in cases of worsening multiple sclerosis (MS). Cy is currently used for patients whose disease is not controlled by beta-interferon or glatiramer acetate as well as those with rapidly worsening MS. The most commonly used regimens involve outpatient IV pulse therapy given with or without corticosteroids every 4 to 8 weeks. Side effects include nausea, headache, alopecia, pain, male and women infertility, bladder toxicity, and risk of malignancy. Previous studies suggest that cy is effective in patients in the earlier stages of disease, where inflammation predominates over degenerative processes. Given that early inflammatory events appear to correlate with later disability, a major question is whether strong anti-inflammatory drugs, such as cy, will have an impact on later degenerative changes if given early in the disease to halt inflammation.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21547093 PMCID: PMC3087413 DOI: 10.4061/2011/961702
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autoimmune Dis ISSN: 2090-0430
Figure 1Clinical studies of cy in the treatment of MS.
| Date | Author | No. of patients | Type of MS | Regimen | Comments and side effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1975 | Drachman et al. | 6 | Acute attacks | 4–5 mg/kg IV for 10 successive days | No effect observed on recovery from relapse |
| 1966 | Aimard et al. | 1 | Progressive | Arrest of disease in progressive MS patients, | |
| 1967 | Girard et al. | 30 | Progressive | 200 mg/day IV for 4–6 weeks; (4–9 g total) | 50% improved or stable at 2 years |
| 1969 | Millac and Miller | 16 | Progressive | Oral, 75–100 mg/day | Toxicity associated with low white blood counts |
| 1975 | Hommes et al. | 32 | Progressive | 100 mg qid + 50 mg prednisone bid (8 g total over 20 days) | Stabilization in 69% of patients. Better results were found in patients with shorter duration of their disease |
| 1980 | Hommes et al. | 39 | Progressive | 400 mg cy + 100 mg prednisone. 8 g total | Stabilization in 69% of patients. Open label, uncontrolled |
| 1981 | Theys et al. | 21 | Progressive | 6–8 g given over 3–4 weeks | No effect in patients with moderately advanced MS over 2 years |
| 1983 | Hauser et al. | 20 | Progressive | 400–500 mg/day IV for 10–14 days + ACTH | 16/20 stabilized at 1 year versus 4/20 with ACTH and 9 out of 18 with plasma exchange regimen |
| 1987 | Goodkin et al. | 27 | Progressive | Inpatient induction for 10–14 days with IV cy/ACTH or outpatient induction with 700 mg/m2 weekly for 6 weeks plus prednisone | Maintenance therapy of 700 mg/m2 every 2 months for 24 months. Stabilization in 59% of patients induced at 12 months versus 17% in nonrandomized controls |
| 1987 | Myers et al. | 14 | Progressive | Monthly therapy with 400–800 mg/m2 oral or IV escalating to 1200–2000 mg/m2 monthly; 5–13 doses given over 5–14 months to reduce B cell and CD4+ cells. With and without steroids | 3 improved, 9 unchanged, and 2 worsened |
| 1987 | Siracusa et al. | 14 | Progressive | Short course of intensive cy until WBC reached 3000 | 5 patients discontinued because of side effects. Patients stable, though not improved |
| 1988 | Carter et al. | 164 | Progressive | 2-week IV cy/ACTH regimen | 81% improved or stable at 1 year. Reprogression in 69% of patients at mean of 17.6 months |
| 1989 | Mauch et al. | 21 | Progressive | 8 mg/kg IV at 4-day intervals until lymphocyte count was half the initial value. (1.9 g average total dose) | 20/21 patients stable at 1 year versus 7/21 patients receiving ACTH |
| 1989 | Canadian | 55 | Progressive | 1 g IV on alternate days up to 9 g + oral prednisone | No difference versus placebo ( |
| 1989 | Trouillas et al. | 10 | Progressive | IV (450 mg/day) for 20 days 3 weeks + MP | 6/10 stabilized at 3 years versus 9/10 in plasma exchange regimen versus 0/10 in untreated or azathioprine controls |
| 1991 | Likosky et al. | 22 | Progressive | IV (400–500 mg) 5 days/week until leukocyte count fell below 4000/mm3 | No difference versus placebo ( |
| 1993 | Weiner et al. | 256 | Progressive | IV cy/ACTH induction versus modified IV cy/ACTH induction (600 mg/m2 on days 1, 2, 4, 6, 8) followed by 700 mg/m2 IV pulses every 2 months for 2 years | No difference between published or modified induction (56% stable at 12 months). Benefit of booster versus no boosters at 24 and 30 months |
| 1998 | La Mantia et al. | 30 | Progressive | Every 2 months IV pulses (600 mg/m) for 12 months with or without induction (300 mg/m2 IV for 9 days) | At 12 months 75% stable if induction given; 35% stable if no induction |
| 1999 | Hohol et al. | 95 | Progressive | Progressive induction with 1 g IV MP for 5 days followed by IV pulse cy/MP every 1 month for 1 year, every 6 weeks for 1 year and every 2 months for 1 year | Response to therapy linked to duration of disease |
| 2003 | Perini et al. | 26 | Progressive | IV cy/MP 800–1250 mg/m2 monthly for 1 year then every 2 months for 1 year | Clinical improvement at 2 years/reduction in Gd+ lesions and T2 lesion volume |
| 2004 | Zephir et al. | 111 | Progressive | IV cy/MP 700 mg/m2 monthly for 1 year | Response in patients with clinical attack in the 2 years prior to therapy |
| 1973 | Cendrowski | 23 | Relapsing remitting and progressive | 100–300 mg IV for 16–33 days + 50 mg hydrocortisone | No difference in comparison to patients treated with ACTH or cortisol |
| 1977 | Gonsette et al. | 110 | Relapsing-remitting | IV over 2 weeks to achieve leukopenia of 2000 and lymphopenia of 1000. (1–12 g) | Stabilization in 62% of patients over 2–4 years. Decrease in relapse rate |
| 1980 | Gonsette et al. | 134 | Relapsing-remitting | IV over 2 weeks to achieve leukopenia of 2000 and lymphopenia of 1000. (1–12 g) | Stabilization in relapse rate in 76% of patients |
| 1988 | Killian et al. | 14 | Relapsing-remitting | Monthly 750 mg/m2 IV pulses for 1 year | A trend showing decreased relapses in 6 treated patients versus 8 placebo patients |
| 1990 | Millefiorini et al. | 15 | Relapsing-progressive | IV cy followed by booster every 2 months for 2 years | 50% clinically stable at 2 years. No major side effects |
| 1990 | D'Andrea et al. | 7 | Relapsing-remitting | IV induction (11 doses 300 mg/m2) then every 6 months for 3 years | Decrease relapse rate in all patients at 1 year; in the following 2 years, 2 patients worsened, and others were clinically stable |
| 1997 | Weinstock-Guttman et al. | 17 | “Fulminant” | IV 500 mg/m + IV MP for 5 days followed by maintenance therapy with cy/methotrexate, MP or IFN-beta-1b | 13/17 (75%) patients improved or were stable at 12 months; 9/13 (69%) at 24 months |
| 1999 | Gobbini et al. | 5 | Relapsing-remitting | Monthly pulses of CTX (1000 mg/m2) given for 12 months | MRI outcome: decrease in Gd+ lesions following pulse CTX in all patients treated |
| 2000 | Manova et al. | 70 | Relapses | IV MP (200 mg) every other day for 10 doses versus IV cy (200 mg) on alternate days for 10 doses and then monthly for 3 months (total dose: 2.6 g) | At 12 months EDSS improved in CTX-treated group versus MP group. No difference between groups at 1 month |
| 2001 | Khan et al. | 14 | Rapidly deteriorating refractory patients | Pulse cy 1000 mg/m2 given monthly plus 20 mg IV dexamethasone | Clinical improvement or stability in 14/14 patients at 6 months sustained at 18 months following treatment |
| 2001 | Patti et al. | 10 | Rapidly progressive IFN- | Monthly pulses cy 500–1500 mg/m for 18 months | Reduction in relapses, disability plus T2 MRI burden |
| 2002 | Smith et al. | 58 | Rapidly deteriorating refractory patients | 3 days IV MP followed by monthly pulses of MP or MP/cy (800 mg/m2) for 6 months | Less Gd+ lesions at 3 and 6 months in CTX/MP versus MP treated subjects |
| 2004 | Patti et al. | 10 | Clinical and MRI follow-up 36 months after the discontinuation of cy in previous reported patients | Monthly pulses cy 500–1500 mg/m for 18 months | Maintenance of the results obtained in relapse rate, EDSS, T2 MRI total lesion load and T2 lesions number |
| 2005 | Reggio et al. | 30 | Rapidly progressive IFN- | 500–1500 mg/m2 combined with INF- | Reduction in relapses plus Gd+ MRI burden |
| 2005 | de Bittencourt PR | 1 | Rapidly progressive | IV cy/MP 3800 mg accidentally given | Long term remission (7 years) |
| 2006 | Gladstone | 12 | Deteriorating and RR and SP MS patients | 200 mg per kg over 4 days | No patients increased their baseline EDSS score more than 1.0, improvement in quality of life after 15 months |
| 2008 | Krishman et al. | 21 | MS patients with “active” MRI or relapse or EDSS deterioration in the year before | 50 mg/kg/die for 4 consecutive days | Reduction of EDSS and of the number of Gd+ lesions at end of follow-up (24 months) |
| 2009 | Patti et al. | 20 | Active RR MS patients (>1 relapse in the prior 12 months and >1 Gd+ MRI lesion) | Monthly cy, administered to induce a leucopoenia below 1000× mm3, plus methylprednisolone (MP) 1 g for 12 months followed by IFN- | Reduction of relapse rate and of the number of gadolinium-enhancing lesions at end of follow-up (24 months). Relapse-free patients at the second year were 80% in the cy group versus 40% in the IFN- |
| 2009 | Perumal et al. | 26 | Active RR MS patients (at least two relapse in the year before) | ||
| 2009 | Makhani et al. | 17 | Children with MS with multiple relapses or EDSS deterioration in the year before | Induction therapy alone, induction therapy with pulse maintenance therapy or pulse maintenance therapy alone at a dose of 600–1000 mg/m2 | After 1 year of treatment reduction in relapse rate and a stabilization of disability |
Treatment regimens.
| (a) IV induction therapy: 600 mg/m2 CTX given on days 1, 2, 4, 6, 8 plus MP given daily for 8 days. |
| (b) IV pulse therapy with CYX/MP: CTX pulses starting at 800 mg/m2 with dose augmentation in order to obtain a leukopenia of 3000/mm3 and a lynphocitopenia of 800/mm3; every 4 weeks x 18–24 months, every 2 months × 24. 1 g MP given with CTX. |
| (c) Pulse therapy with CTX at a fixed dose: CTX pulses given at 800–1000 mg/m2 every 4–8 weeks for 12–24 months, given with or without MP. |
| (d) Combination therapy: IV pulse CTX therapy given concomitantly with beta-interferon or glatiramer acetate in nonresponders. |
Data obtained from 200 MS patients treated with cy in our centre over a ten-year period. *of the fertile women.
| Side effects | % |
|---|---|
| Nausea and vomit | 40 |
| Amenorrhea | 18* |
| Transitory amenorrhea | 60* |
| Transitory azoospermia | 60 |
| Headache | 15 |
| Alopecia (reversible) | 13 |
| Fatigue | 10 |
| Diffuse pain | 8 |
| Cutaneous rash | 6 |
| Gastritis and diarrhoea | 6 |
| Bladder toxicity | 6 |
| Infection | 3 |
| Cancer risk | 1 |
| Arrhythmia | 1 |
| Dyspnoea | 0.5 |