Publications by authors named "GA Curt"

Eg5 (kinesin spindle protein) is a microtubule motor protein, essential for centrosome separation during mitosis. This Phase I/II, open-label, multicenter, two-part study investigated AZD4877, a potent Eg5 inhibitor, in patients with acute myeloid leukemia. Primary objectives were to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) (part A), assess efficacy (part B) and determine the pharmacokinetic profile (parts A and B).

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This article endeavors to clarify the current requirements and status of regulatory approval for chemoprevention (risk reduction) drugs and discusses possible improvements to the regulatory pathway for chemoprevention. Covering a wide range of topics in as much depth as space allows, this report is written in a style to facilitate the understanding of nonscientists and to serve as a framework for informing the directions of experts engaged more deeply with this issue. Key topics we cover here are as follows: a history of definitive cancer chemoprevention trials and their influence on the evolution of regulatory assessments; a brief review of the long-standing success of pharmacologic risk reduction of cardiovascular diseases and its relevance to approval for cancer risk reduction drugs; the use and limitations of biomarkers for developing and the approval of cancer risk reduction drugs; the identification of individuals at a high(er) risk for cancer and who are appropriate candidates for risk reduction drugs; business models that should incentivize pharmaceutical industry investment in cancer risk reduction; a summary of scientific and institutional barriers to development of cancer risk reduction drugs; and a summary of major recommendations that should help facilitate the pathway to regulatory approval for pharmacologic cancer risk reduction drugs.

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Anticancer drug discovery has shifted from an empiric random screening directed approach to a more rational and mechanistic, target-based approach, which reflects our rapidly expanding knowledge of the pathogenesis of a variety of forms of cancer at the molecular level, providing new targets for drug discovery and development. The clinical development of target-based anticancer drugs will require fundamental changes to the traditional clinical trial design and end points that have been used for conventional cytotoxic drugs. In the phase I and II settings, traditional end points (toxicity and response) may not be suitable for more selective, cytostatic target-based agents, and these end points may be replaced by biological or pharmacokinetic end points to define the optimal doses and the therapeutic effects of these drugs on their targets.

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As oncologists have become more effective in alleviating pain, nausea and depression, fatigue has emerged as the most important symptom suffered by cancer patients. Indeed, the current literature suggests that fatigue is currently the most important untreated symptom in cancer medicine. In recent surveys of patients and their caregivers, fatigue is more important for the quality of life than pain, nausea or depression.

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Fatigue is the most commonly reported symptom in cancer patients and has a profound effect on patient quality of life (QOL). The Fatigue-1 and Fatigue-2 surveys performed by the Fatigue Coalition have shown that fatigue occurs on a consistent basis in approximately three quarters of patients treated for cancer. Fatigue-2 study results show that fatigue is associated with significant physical, emotional, psychologic, and social consequences, with virtually every aspect of daily life being affected.

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Purpose: This survey was designed to confirm the prevalence and duration of fatigue in the cancer population and to assess its physical, mental, social, and economic impacts on the lives of patients and caregivers. Patients and Methods. A 25-minute telephone interview was completed with 379 cancer patients having a prior history of chemotherapy.

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Fatigue is a complex, multifactorial disorder with physical, mental, and psychological dimensions that has been associated with diminished quality of life (QOL) in patients with cancer. The prevalence and severity of fatigue, however, has only recently been studied systematically. Two national surveys commissioned by The Fatigue Coalition, a multidisciplinary group of medical practitioners, researchers, and patient advocates, whose mission is to study the importance of fatigue for patients with cancer and their caregivers, have assessed the prevalence, severity, and QOL consequences of fatigue in patients with cancer.

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Fatigue is a complex, multifactorial disorder with physical, mental, and psychological dimensions that has been associated with diminished quality of life (QOL) in patients with cancer. The prevalence and severity of fatigue, however, has only recently been studied systematically. Two national surveys commissioned by The Fatigue Coalition, a multidisciplinary group of medical practitioners, researchers, and patient advocates, whose mission is to study the importance of fatigue for patients with cancer and their caregivers, have assessed the prevalence, severity, and QOL consequences of fatigue in patients with cancer.

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Scientific meetings, like living organisms, tend to evolve over time. For example, the yearly ASCO meeting, which began as a small American academic oncology gathering emphasizing clinical research, has grown into a large, international forum which increasingly emphasizes best standard of care and reimbursement issues [Editor's note: see ASCO review by Chabner, Friedberg in this issue, page 263]. One meeting which has remained true to its initial mission is the NCI-EORTC Symposium on New Drugs in Cancer Therapy which occurs every two years in Amsterdam.

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The first time a nation made research a national priority was probably in 15th Century Portugal. While the Spanish built large galleons to ferry gold from the New World to Madrid, the Portuguese built small caravels to return with something more valuable: information. A National Navigational Institute was established in Sagres, where Prince Henry collated the raw data being delivered by the caravels: latitude, longitude, ocean depths, coastal landmarks, and current.

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Although fatigue is the most common symptom reported by cancer patients and has serious adverse effects on quality of life, it remains poorly understood. A survey was designed to characterize the epidemiology of cancer-related fatigue from the perspectives of the patient, primary caregiver, and oncologist. A telephone survey included 419 cancer patients recruited from 100,000 randomly selected households nationwide.

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There is often a considerable lapse of time between the definition of what causes a disease in the laboratory and the development of successful therapy. However, the history of medicine teaches us that the need to understand the scientific basis of disease before the discovery of new treatments is both essential and inevitable. During the middle of the 19th century, the work of the great German pathologist, Rudolf Virchow, defined disease as having an anatomic or histologic basis.

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The process of searching for new cancer drugs has evolved from rational empiricism using high volume murine screens towards more targeted systems designed to discover agents which are specifically active against the common solid tumors of adulthood. Irrespective of the method of discovery, animal models are necessary in cancer drug development to answer fundamental questions of drug pharmacology and end organ toxicity. This knowledge is fundamental to the design of Phase I clinical trials.

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Trimetrexate (TMTX) is an analog of methotrexate and a potent inhibitor of the enzyme dihydrofolate reductase. In this phase I study, TMTX was given intravenously to 32 patients as a constant infusion over 24 hours every 28 days. The maximum-tolerated dose of TMTX was 200 mg/m2, with myelosuppression as the dose-limiting toxicity.

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We have conducted a Phase I and pharmacological study of flavone acetic acid, one of a series of novel flavonoids. The drug was administered i.v.

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Calcium channel blockers (CCBs) such as verapamil and nitrendipine are capable of increasing drug sensitivity in resistant murine and human tumor cells. This finding has potential value in the treatment of acquired drug resistance in human malignancies. Thus, we tested the ability of CCBs of two different structural classes to enhance the toxicity of doxorubicin (DOX), vinblastine (VBL), and vincristine (VCR) for normal myeloid and macrophage colony formation (marrow colony forming units-granulocyte-monocyte [CFU-GM]).

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