Rowinsky E K, Burke P J, Karp J E, Tucker R W, Ettinger D S, Donehower R C
Johns Hopkins Oncology Center, Baltimore, Maryland 21205.
Cancer Res. 1989 Aug 15;49(16):4640-7.
Taxol, a novel antimicrotubule agent that enhances tubulin polymerization and microtubule stability, was administered to adults with refractory leukemias as a 24-h i.v. infusion in a Phase I study. The primary objectives were to determine the maximum tolerated dose of taxol administered on this schedule to patients with acute leukemias and describe the nonhematological toxicities which became dose limiting. The starting dose, 200 mg/m2, was based on the maximum tolerated dose in solid tumor trials, in which myelosuppression precluded dose escalation. Seventeen patients received 28 evaluable courses at 200, 250, 315, and 390 mg/m2. Severe mucositis limited further dose escalation. Other nonhematological effects included peripheral neuropathy, alopecia, myalgias, arthralgias, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and an acute pulmonary reaction that was presumptively due to taxol's Cremophor vehicle. Mean peak taxol plasma concentrations at all dose levels were in the range of concentrations that were previously demonstrated to induce microtubule bundles, a morphological effect associated with cytotoxicity, in leukemia cells in vitro. Pretreatment blasts from 12 patients were incubated with taxol ex vivo. Taxol-induced microtubule bundles were apparent in the blasts of eight patients who also had cytoreduction of tumor, and sensitivity to bundle formation was related to the magnitude of antitumor activity. In contrast, taxol did not induce microtubule bundles ex vivo in the blasts of the other four total nonresponders. Based on this study, the maximum tolerated doses and recommended Phase II doses for taxol, limited by nonhematological toxicity and administered as a 24-h i.v. infusion to patients with refractory leukemias, are 390 and 315 mg/m2. Phase II trials at these myelosuppressive doses are required to determine taxol's activity in the treatment of leukemias. In addition, further evaluation of microtubule bundle formation ex vivo in Phase II studies is necessary to determine the ultimate utility of this assay in assessing tumor sensitivity to taxol.
紫杉醇是一种新型抗微管药物,可增强微管蛋白聚合和微管稳定性。在一项I期研究中,对难治性白血病成人患者进行了24小时静脉输注紫杉醇治疗。主要目的是确定按此方案给药时急性白血病患者的最大耐受剂量,并描述成为剂量限制因素的非血液学毒性。起始剂量为200mg/m²,基于实体瘤试验中的最大耐受剂量,在实体瘤试验中,骨髓抑制使剂量无法进一步增加。17例患者接受了28个可评估疗程的治疗,剂量分别为200、250、315和390mg/m²。严重的粘膜炎限制了进一步的剂量增加。其他非血液学效应包括周围神经病变、脱发、肌痛、关节痛、恶心、呕吐、腹泻以及一种急性肺部反应,推测该反应是由紫杉醇的聚氧乙烯蓖麻油载体引起的。所有剂量水平下紫杉醇的平均血浆峰值浓度均在先前已证明可在体外白血病细胞中诱导微管束(一种与细胞毒性相关的形态学效应)的浓度范围内。对12例患者治疗前的原始细胞进行了体外紫杉醇孵育。在8例同时出现肿瘤细胞减少的患者的原始细胞中,紫杉醇诱导的微管束明显可见,对微管束形成的敏感性与抗肿瘤活性的大小相关。相比之下,在另外4例完全无反应者的原始细胞中,紫杉醇在体外未诱导微管束形成。基于这项研究,对于难治性白血病患者,受非血液学毒性限制并以24小时静脉输注方式给药的紫杉醇的最大耐受剂量和推荐的II期剂量分别为390和315mg/m²。需要在这些骨髓抑制剂量下进行II期试验,以确定紫杉醇在白血病治疗中的活性。此外,在II期研究中对体外微管束形成进行进一步评估,对于确定该检测方法在评估肿瘤对紫杉醇敏感性方面的最终实用性是必要的。