AI Article Synopsis

  • Pirarubicin tetrahydropyranyl adriamycin (THP-ADR) is an alternative to doxorubicin that is effective against some resistant cancer cell lines and was tested in a phase II study for treating newly diagnosed peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL).
  • Seventeen patients participated in the study, receiving the THP-COP regimen, which included several drugs, and the results showed a high overall response rate of 94% with most patients achieving complete remission.
  • Though side effects such as leukocytopenia and neutropenia were common, they were temporary, suggesting that biweekly THP-COP could be a safe and effective treatment option for PTCL patients.

Article Abstract

Pirarubicin tetrahydropyranyl adriamycin (THP-ADR) is an analogue of doxorubicin. This agent exhibits activity against some doxorubicin-resistant cell lines. We performed a phase II study of biweekly THP-COP [50 mg/m(2) pirarubicin, 750 mg/m(2) cyclophosphamide, 1.4 mg/m(2) vincristine (2.0 mg maximum) on day 1, and 100 mg/body predonisolone on days 1-5] in patients with peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL). Seventeen patients with newly diagnosed PTCL were enrolled. Histological diagnoses were of PTCL, not otherwise specified (n = 5), or angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (n = 12). All diagnostic specimens including those of the historical control group were centrally reviewed by hematological pathologists. All patients received six cycles of biweekly THP-COP. The patient group included 13 male and 4 female patients, with a median age of 62 years. The median follow-up time in surviving patients was 30 months. Overall response rate was 94% with 15 cases of complete remission (88%). The 3-year progression-free survival and overall survival rates were 57% and 75%, respectively. The most frequent adverse events associated with biweekly THP-COP were leukocytopenia (100%), neutropenia (100%), and lymphopenia (100%), followed by alopecia (92%) and anaemia (88%). All of these occurred only transiently, and the patients subsequently recovered. Biweekly THP-COP is a safe and promising therapy for patients with newly diagnosed PTCL. This study is registered in a public database (UMIN000010485).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hon.2136DOI Listing

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