Phase I and pharmacological study of intra-arterial hepatic administration of pirarubicin in patients with advanced hepatic metastases

1994 
Abstract Intra-arterial hepatic (i.a.h.) administration of the doxorubicin analogue pirarubicin was evaluated in a phase I trial, based on preclinical studies that showed an advantage of pirarubicin over doxorubicin after locoregional hepatic administration. Pirarubicin was given to 9 patients with metastatic liver disease with intrapatient dose escalation. Of the 58 cycles evaluable for tolerance, no hepatobiliary or vascular toxicity was observed. The doselimiting toxicity was granulocytopenia: the maximum administered doses ranged from 50 to 120 mg/m 2 , suggesting variable rates of pirarubicin hepatic extraction between patients. Pharmacokinetic data obtained in 7 patients, in which a direct comparison of intravenous (i.v.) and i.a.h. administration was possible, indicated a median i.v./i.a.h. ratio of 7.4 for the maximal plasma concentration, and a median ratio of 4 for the area under the plasma concentrations versus time curves, suggesting a high pirarubicin hepatic extraction. An unexpectedly high response rate was observed: two complete (colorectal carcinoma) and two partial responses. These data demonstrate that i.a.h. pirarubicin not only produced high locoregional concentrations and reduced systemic exposure, but can also achieve responses in metastatic liver disease of colorectal origin.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    15
    References
    12
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []