Methylene dimethane sulfonate is the first member of the homologous series of straight-chain diol sulfonates. It was selected for phase I testing because of high activity in the rat Yoshida sarcoma system and a possible novel site of alkylation due to its small molecular size. Methylene dimethane sulfonate was administered as a rapid iv bolus infusion to 39 patients at doses ranging from 14 to 225 mg/m2. Nausea and vomiting were not severe but total alopecia occurred in the majority of patients at doses greater than 100 mg/m2. The dose-limiting toxic effect was thrombocytopenia, which was cumulative with lower, more prolonged nadirs following successive courses. The median time to platelet count nadir was 21 days, with recovery by 35 days. A minor response was seen in one patient with an adenocarcinoma of the lung. The recommended dose for phase II studies is 125 mg/m2 for patients who have received prior chemotherapy and 150 mg/m2 for those who have not, in an every 35-day schedule.
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Eur J Cancer Clin Oncol
August 1989
Christie Hospital, Manchester, U.K.
Br J Cancer
May 1988
CRC Department of Medical Oncology, Charing Cross Hospital, London, UK.
Methylene dimethane sulphonate (MDMS), the first member of the homologous series of dimethane sulphonic acid esters, was administered to 19 patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer. All patients had received prior chemotherapy and in addition 3 had received prior radiotherapy. MDMS was given as an i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethylene dimethane sulfonate is the first member of the homologous series of straight-chain diol sulfonates. It was selected for phase I testing because of high activity in the rat Yoshida sarcoma system and a possible novel site of alkylation due to its small molecular size. Methylene dimethane sulfonate was administered as a rapid iv bolus infusion to 39 patients at doses ranging from 14 to 225 mg/m2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Chemother Pharmacol
April 1987
The technique of alkaline elution was employed to study the interactions of methylene dimethane sulphonate (MDMS) and formaldehyde (HCHO) with DNA from Yoshida lymphosarcoma cells treated with these agents. MDMS and HCHO produced a proteinase sensitive filter retention which indicated the presence of DNA-protein cross-links. MDMS also produced some proteinase K-resistant filter retention which was believed to indicate DNA-interstrand cross-linking, whilst only single-strand breaks could be detected following treatment with HCHO.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Biol Relat Stud Phys Chem Med
August 1977
The sedimentation properties of the nascent DNA of Yoshida sarcoma cells, sensitive and resistant to methylene dimethane sulphonate and cross-resistant to U.V. light, have been studied after irradiation with U.
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