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Title: Phase I trial of tiazofurin administered by i.v. bolus daily for 5 days, with pharmacokinetic evaluation. Author: Roberts JD, Stewart JA, McCormack JJ, Krakoff IR, Culham CA, Hartshorn JN, Newman RA, Haugh LD, Young JA. Journal: Cancer Treat Rep; 1987 Feb; 71(2):141-9. PubMed ID: 3802111. Abstract: Tiazofurin is a novel C-nucleoside with significant antitumor activity in murine tumor models. In a phase I clinical trial, patients received tiazofurin by bolus iv infusion daily for 5 days. Six doses ranging from 550 to 4100 mg/m2/day were evaluated. Thirty-one treatment courses were initiated in 21 patients. Tiazofurin induced multiple, transient toxic effects at all but the lowest dose level, and treatment interruption was a common result. Nine of 28 treatment courses initiated at doses greater than or equal to 1100 mg/m2/day were interrupted at less than 5 days; only five of eight courses initiated at 1100 mg/m2/day were completed. Symptoms leading to treatment interruption included headache, nausea and emesis, and lethargy and malaise. Other significant, transient toxic effects included skeletal muscle injury manifest as pain, weakness, or serum biochemical abnormalities; mucocutaneous effects; and mental or mood changes. One case each of transient pericarditis and fatal cardiomyopathy occurred at the highest dose. Myelosuppression was observed but was transient and not dose limiting. In addition to leukopenia and thrombocytopenia, unexpected declines in serum hemoglobin were observed, although these were of uncertain significance. Tiazofurin induced significant increases in uric acid production which could be reversed with coadministration of allopurinol. Pharmacokinetic analysis revealed tiazofurin plasma elimination to be at least biphasic, with a beta-half-time of 4.2 hours; most of an injected dose could be recovered from the urine as unaltered compound within 24 hours. From this study we conclude that an appropriate dose for phase II trials with this schedule is less than or equal to 1000 mg/m2/day. The schedule may be a difficult one for clinical evaluation of antitumor activity, however, because of the possibility of frequent treatment interruption due to multiple systemic toxic effects.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]