| Literature DB >> 7046623 |
Y K Park, A Abuchowski, S Davis, F Davis.
Abstract
The polyethylene glycol (PEG) adduct of Escherichia coli L-asparaginase was administered intravenously to 4 patients with chemotherapy refractory cancers. The PEG-enzyme in plasma exhibited a half-life of 16-25 days. Doses of 250IU/m2 or greater reduced plasma asparagine to undetectable levels for as long as enzyme was detectable in plasma. All doses of enzyme administered (250-1000 IU/m2) caused similar increases in plasma aspartate, i.e. no dose-response relationship. Pleural fluid and ascites contained detectable enzyme but at a value 10-15% of simultaneously drawn plasma levels. Toxicity in this small group of patients was minimal; nausea and transient fever predominated. There were no clinical signs of PEG-asparaginase-induced pancreatitis, renal dysfunction, hypocalcemia and hyperglycemia. No patient developed evidence of a PEG-asparaginase allergic reaction; no patient formed antibodies to asparaginase or PEG-asparaginase. Two patients with large cell lymphoma showed a partial response to treatment.Entities:
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Year: 1981 PMID: 7046623
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anticancer Res ISSN: 0250-7005 Impact factor: 2.480