Purpose: To define the maximum tolerated dose (MTD), the recommended phase II dose, the optimal infusion duration and pharmacokinetics of the semisynthetic taxoid derivative RPR 109881A, given as a 1-h or 3-h infusion every 3 weeks.
Patients And Methods: RPR109881A was administered as a 1-h i.v. infusion to 34 patients (study 1) with oral steroids as pre-medication. In a subsequent study, 29 patients were treated at the recommended dose or at the dose immediately below (study 2); the first 14 patients received RPR 109881A as a 3-h infusion, while the subsequent 15 were randomized to receive the drug as a 1-h or 3-h infusion. The pharmacokinetics of RPR109881A was studied in plasma and urine and for selected patients in some biological fluids (cerebrospinal fluid, pleural effusion, ascitis).
Results: In study 1, the dose was escalated from 15 to 105 mg/m(2), at which dose two of five patients presented dose-limiting toxicities with febrile neutropenia (FN) after the first cycle, thus defining the MTD. The dose of 90 mg/m(2), at which grade 3/4 neutropenia was almost universal with FN in 18%, was recommended for phase II. At 90 mg/m(2) the incidence of diarrhea, fatigue and alopecia were 59, 29 and 70%, respectively. The results of study 2 were comparable to those of study 1, thus recommending the 1-h infusion duration for phase II evaluation. RPR 109881A exhibited a high total body clearance, a large distribution volume and long terminal half-life of 20 h. RPR 109881A was detected in cerebrospinal fluid shortly after the end of 1-h infusion. Three objective responses were observed in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients, including a patient with brain metastases.
Conclusions: The antitumor activity in NSCLC, the reproducible profile of toxicity and above all the ability to cross the blood-brain barrier make RPR 109881A worthy of further disease-oriented clinical development.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/annonc/mdf174 | DOI Listing |
Expert Opin Investig Drugs
August 2009
Research Fellow, Jules Bordet Institute, 121, Bd. de Waterloo, 1000 Brussels, Belgium.
Significant advances in cancer treatment have been achieved with novel targeted and state-of-the-art treatments. While the targeted treatments have received much attention in recent years, the more 'traditional' chemotherapeutic agents continue to play an important role in several malignancies. Former taxanes such as docetaxel and paclitaxel, with their broad anticancer activity, have contributed significantly to the improved treatment of a number of neoplastic diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Chemother Pharmacol
December 2009
Thoracic Oncology Division, Shizuoka Cancer Center Hospital, 1007 Shimonagakubo, Nagaizumi-cho, Sunto-gun, Shizuoka 411-8777, Japan.
Larotaxel (XRP9881, RPR109881), a novel semi-synthetic taxoid that shares a mode of action with the taxanes docetaxel and paclitaxel, was active in preclinical studies against a broad spectrum of tumour cells and tumour models refractory/resistant to taxanes, and have demonstrated clinical activity in taxane pre-treated/resistant metastatic breast cancer (MBC) patients. The current phase I dose-escalation study sought to define in Japanese patients with advanced solid tumours the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and recommended dose (RD) of larotaxel administered as a 1-h intravenous infusion every 3 weeks. Eighteen patients were treated in total with 11 of those (61%) having previously received a docetaxel- or paclitaxel-based regimen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Transl Oncol
July 2007
Unidad de Oncología Médica, Hospital Ruber Internacional, Madrid, Spain.
Purpose: Cisplatin-gemcitabine is a synergistic chemotherapy (CT) combination highly proven in a broad spectrum of epithelial neoplasms and shows a non-cross-resistance profile with the most active drugs in metastatic breast cancer (MBC). We have conducted an exploratory study to determine if treatment with low doses of a combination of fixed-rate gemcitabine infusion and cisplatin was clinically meaningful in women relapsing after a minimum of 2 prior lines of CT for advanced disease (range 2-6), which had to have necessarily included both anthracyclines and taxanes. Another goal was to find the optimal individual schedule by adjusting frequency and dosage according to patient tolerability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Oncol
July 2002
Oncology Institute of Southern Switzerland, Ospedale San Giovanni, 6500 Bellinzona, Switzerland.
Purpose: To define the maximum tolerated dose (MTD), the recommended phase II dose, the optimal infusion duration and pharmacokinetics of the semisynthetic taxoid derivative RPR 109881A, given as a 1-h or 3-h infusion every 3 weeks.
Patients And Methods: RPR109881A was administered as a 1-h i.v.
Bull Cancer
April 2002
Société française du cancer, 6, rue Louis-Thuillier, 75005 Paris, France.
This review describes the experimental and clinical properties of new taxanes and epothilones. Six new taxanes are currently in clinical trials: BMS 184476, BMS 188797, BMS 275183, IDN 5109/BAY 598862, RPR 109881A et RPR 116258 All these derivatives share the same feature which is a decreased recognition by Pgp-170, the product of the MDR1 gene. This confers innovative properties such as in vitro and in vivo activities on tumors expressing the Pgp-170, activity by the oral route.
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