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Clinical Trials |
Oncopharmacology Department, Pharmacy Service [F. P., F. B., C. A., M-P. S.] and Department of Medicine [S. C., M. F.], Anticancer Center, Centre Régional de Lutte contre le Cancer, 34298 Montpellier Cedex 5; Clinical Pharmacokinetic Laboratory, Faculty of Pharmacy, University Montpellier I, Montpellier 34060 Cedex 2 [F. B.]; and Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM) U469, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique-INSERM Pharmacology Endocrinology, Montpellier 34298 Cedex 5 [C. C.], France
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Founded on the pharmacokinetic principles of phase-specific, plasma half-life, and stability in solution, infusional schedules for chemotherapy administration represent a rational method for the delivery of many antineoplastic agents. For several antimitotic drugs, long-term continuous infusion increased therapeutic activity or improved the therapeutic index by decreasing toxicity (6) .
Bosanquet and Bird (7) studying in vitro degradation of melphalan reported that continuous exposure of melphalan in chemosensitivity assays is probably preferable to the arbitrary 1-h exposure commonly used. Moreover, Teicher et al. (8) indicated that in vitro continuous administration of melphalan could be at least as cytotoxic as bolus administration of the same dose on MCF7 breast cancer cells. In a recent in vitro study, we have shown that protracted infusion of melphalan had a higher cytotoxic effect than bolus administration on 8226 (myeloma) and A2780 (ovarian) cancer cell lines (9) .
On the basis of in vitro study and pharmacokinetic (2) considerations (short half-life, small Vd,2 and low protein-binding capacity), melphalan is a good candidate for continuous infusion. Significant intra- and interpatient variabilities in pharmacokinetic parameters have been shown. After short i.v. infusion, the distribution half-life ranged from 5 to 15 min, and the t1/2 elim from 17 to 75 min (10, 11, 12) or from 2 to 4 h (13) Total plasma Cl ranged from 92 to 961 ml/min/m2. The Vd was found to be greater than the total-body water (35.5185.7 liters/m2), although lower values have been reported (8 and 50 liters/m2; 1 , 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 ).
However, in clinical practice, melphalan must be prepared extemporaneously before administration because its rapid degradation in conventional 0.9% sodium chloride at ambient temperature prohibits its use in continuous infusion (17) . Thus, the manufacturer recommends use of this drug within 1.5 h after constitution. Degradation has been reported to be a function of sodium chloride concentration, temperature, and pH. In a previously published work (17) , we have optimized the stability conditions of melphalan. In 3% sodium chloride, the drug was stable for up to 6 h at room temperature, which allowed a longer infusion time.
Here, we conducted a Phase I trial in adult patients who had various types of cancer that were refractory to conventional therapy and who received continuous constant infusion of melphalan for 24 h. The objectives of this study were to determine the MTD of melphalan and to evaluate its toxicity and its antitumor activity as well as its pharmacokinetic characteristics at each dose.
| PATIENTS AND METHODS |
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-glutamyl-aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase, and serum
proteins); (c) renal function (serum urea, serum creatinine,
creatinine clearance calculated according to Cockcroft and Gault; Ref.
18
); and (d) serology (HIV, hepatitis B and C
virus, and cytomegalovirus). All of the subjects were negative
for HIV virus and hepatitis B and C. Patients with granulocytes <
1500/mm3, platelets <
100,000/mm3, significant renal dysfunction
(creatinine clearance < 50 ml/min), significant hepatic
dysfunction (serum bilirubin > 2.5 times normal or alanine
aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase > four
times normal), significant pulmonary dysfunction (forced
expiratory volume in 1 s, forced vital capacity, or transfer
factor for carbon monoxide < 65% of the predicted values), or
significant cardiac dysfunction (isotopic left ventricular ejection
fraction < 50%) were excluded from the study. A total of six
cycles per patient was planned. The study protocol was reviewed and approved by the institutional review board. It was performed in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki, and with current European Community and United States Food and Drug Administration guidelines for good clinical practice. The patients were fully informed about the procedure and the purpose of the experiment and gave written consent.
Treatment Regimen.
Melphalan was administered over a 24-h period. The drug was dissolved
in four syringes of 60 ml of 3% sodium chloride; each syringe was
administered i.v. over 6 h through a central venous catheter using
a two-way portable infusion pump. Before administration, syringes were
stored at +4°C (in these conditions melphalan was stable for 48 h). The first dose-step of melphalan consisted of 20
mg/m2. Dose escalations were 10
mg/m2 and were to proceed after at least five
patients had successfully completed therapy at a given dose level.
Chemotherapy was repeated every 3 weeks. If WHO grade 4 toxicity
occurred in one patient at a given dose, at least four additional
patients were enrolled at that level before dose escalation. If grade 4
toxicity occurred in five patients at a given dose, escalation was
stopped.
Response Criteria.
Tumor measurements were repeated once every two to three treatment
cycles. Moreover, at the end of treatment, patients were evaluated for
response by physical examination, chest X-ray, and computerized axial
tomography of the abdomen and/or chest when appropriate. Tumor response
definition was based on WHO criteria. Patients designated complete
responders (CR) attained complete resolution of all disease lasting for
at least 4 weeks. A partial response (PR) was defined as a
50%
reduction in the sum of products of bidirectionally measurable tumors
without the appearance of new lesions. Patients with stable
disease had tumor measurements within 25% of on- study
measurements lasting for at least 4 weeks without development of new
lesions. Progressive disease (PD) was considered as the appearance of
any new lesions or a more than 25% increase in the sum of products.
Toxicity Evaluation.
Patients were assessed after each course of chemotherapy by clinical
examination and by serum and urinary parameters studies to evaluate
possible bone marrow, renal, or liver toxicity. Toxicity was defined
according to the Cancer Therapy Evaluation Programs common toxicity
criteria and graded 1 to 4. Dose-limiting toxicity was defined as
irreversible grade 2 nonhematological toxicity, reversible grade 3
nonhematological toxicity, or grade 4 hematological toxicity. The
recommended MTD dose was defined as the dose below that causing
dose-limiting toxicity.
Pharmacokinetic Analysis.
During the first cycle of treatment each patient underwent
pharmacokinetic evaluation. Blood samples for determination of
melphalan concentrations were obtained during the infusion at 2, 8, 23,
23.25, 23.5, 23.75, and 24 h and, after the end of the infusion,
at 15, 30, 45, 60, and 75 min and 2 and 4 h. Blood was collected
in heparinized tubes and immediately centrifuged. Plasma was removed
and frozen at -20°C until assay. The plasma concentration
versus time data for each patient were subjected to
pharmacokinetic analysis using the P-PHARM software (19)
.
Individual pharmacokinetic parameters were estimated using a Bayesian
methodology that combines the prior knowledge of the mean and
dispersion of the pharmacokinetic parameters in the population to which
the selected individual belongs and the individual samples. Such an
approach avoided a possible bias in the estimation of the elimination
half-life. Indeed, at the low dose (20 mg/m2) for
the last sampling times, melphalan concentrations were below the limit
of quantitation of the analytical method. Preliminary analysis revealed
that the data were best fitted by a one-compartment model (on the basis
of the examination of the Akaike criterion, the objective function, and
the residuals distribution) and that the residuals distribution showed
that the error variance was better described by a heteroscedastic
(proportional to the squared value of the predictions) model. The
structural model was parametrized in terms of Vd and Cl. From the
resulting individualized parameter values, the
t1/2 elim and the AUC were calculated as
follows:
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Determination of Melphalan Concentration in Plasma Samples by
HPLC.
Melphalan concentrations in plasma were assayed by HPLC with UV
detection (254 nm) using the method described previously
(20)
. The procedure involves the addition of an internal
standard (propylparaben) followed by treatment of the samples with
methanol. The HPLC column, Ultrasphere C18 (250 x 4.6 mm, 5
µm), was equilibrated with an eluent mixture consisting of
methanol/water/acetic acid (49.5:49.5:1). Calibration standards were
prepared in the range of 0.020 to 50 µg/ml Within- and between-day
variabilities of the method were <8%. The limit of quantitation was
10 ng/ml; at this level the analytical error averaged 20%.
Quality-control samples were included in each analytical sequence to verify the stability of samples during storage and the accuracy and precision of analysis. Each determination was performed in duplicate.
The HPLC assay is specific for melphalan, and no interaction was detected with other drugs given to the patients. The mono- and dihydroxy-metabolites were not analyzed because they have shown no evidence of cytotoxicity.
Statistical Analysis.
The results are expressed as mean ± SD.
Plasma concentrations and AUC were plotted against dose. Linear regression was performed using unweighted least-squares analysis of the data. The significance of the regression was confirmed using the F test.
A Kruskal-Wallis test was performed to compare normalized (to a 20 mg/m2 dose) AUC and Css, Cl, Vd, and the t1/2 elim across doses.
| RESULTS |
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Toxicity
Hematological Toxicity.
Prestudy neutrophil, platelet, and hemoglobin levels were within the
normal range. As expected, neutropenia was the main hematological
toxicity (Table 2)
. The median time to
leukocyte and neutrophil nadirs occurred at 15 days (range, 1318) and
14 days (range, 921 for the 30- and 40-mg/m2
dose level, respectively. The median time to recovery to pretreatment
values was 3.5 days (range: 19) at 30 mg/m2 and
12.5 days (range: 123) at 40 mg/m2. Grade 4
neutropenia developed in 38% (19 courses) of the cycles, and the
median duration of neutropenia lower than 0.5 x
103/µl was 3 (range, 18) days and 11 (range,
120) days after administration of 30 and 40
mg/m2, respectively. Neutropenia showed a high
degree of interpatient variability. It seemed to be dose-related; grade
34 neutropenia was observed in 0, 55, and 71% of the cycles at 20,
30, and 40 mg/m2, respectively. Episodes of
neutropenic fever were reported in six patients (2 at 30
mg/m2 and 4 at 40 mg/m2).
In five cases, fever episodes were bacteriologically documented:
Escherichia coli in two cases, Enterococcus
faecalis in one case, Streptococcus D in one case, and
Proteus mirabilis in one case.
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There were cumulative myelo- and thrombocyto-suppressions. Indeed, neutropenia and thrombocytopenia were more pronounced after the first courses of melphalan. The severity and the incidence of toxicity varied according to the history of previous cancer therapy.
Anemia was dose related. In the first course of chemotherapy, four grade 3 (two at 30 mg/m2 and two at 40 mg/m2) and two grade 4 were observed. Thirty-four cycles (68%) were associated with anemia of at least grade 2, and packed red cell infusions were given on 4, 13, and 21 occasions for 20, 30, and 40 mg/m2 dose level, respectively.
Extramedullary Toxicity.
Toxicities of the three dose levels of melphalan are listed in Table 3
. They were moderate, and their
incidence and severity were not dose related. Indeed, there were only
three grade 3 and one grade 4 effects noted for the 50 courses of
chemotherapy. The main toxicities included gastrointestinal and hepatic
complications.
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During this study, mucositis was not observed.
Mild elevations of alkaline phosphatase (WHO grade 1, three patients)
and
-glutamyl-aminotransferase (WHO grade 2, four patients) were
observed. Alkaline phosphatase elevation of greater than 130 times
normal (WHO grade 4) occurred in one patient treated with 20
mg/m2 of melphalan; for this patient the other
liver tests were in the normal range. Prior chemotherapy with high-dose
methotrexate (about 2 years ago) might explain such results.
MTD
The MTD was 30 mg/m2 (Table 2)
. At this
dose, at the first course, four patients (40%) of seven had grade 4
thrombocytopenia and neutropenia, and only 10% of patients showed
anemia; these percentages did not increase over the successive courses
of chemotherapy. The 30 mg/m2 dose was tolerable
for two to six courses according to the patient. The study was closed
to enrollment after the development of significant toxicity at highest
dose (40 mg/m2), and no additional patients were
enrolled.
Pharmacokinetic Characteristics of Melphalan
The population database consisted of 130 melphalan concentrations.
The population parameters (fixed effect: Cl and Vd and random effect:
sigma(Cl), sigma(Vd) were as follows: Cl = 168
ml/min/m2 (CV = 30.6%) and Vd = 13.5
liters/m2 (coefficient of variation =
50.4%). Fig. 1
shows the plasma decay
curves of melphalan (plasma concentration versus time curve)
of three representative patients. The mean (± SD) values of the main
pharmacokinetic parameters are reported in Table 4
. Large interindividual variability of
the pharmacokinetic parameters was observed. For the majority of
patients, a steady state concentration was reached about 5 h after
the start of infusion (extreme values: 0.0390.122 µg/ml at 20
mg/m2; 0.0840.15 µg/ml at 30
mg/m2; and 0.1230.265 µg/ml at 40
mg/m2). A linear relationship was found between
the dose and Css (r = 0.57;
P = 0.0068) and between the dose and AUC
(r = 0.60, P = 0.0038). Normalized to a
20-mg/m2 dose, mean AUC values showed
considerable interindividual variability and overlapped between dose
levels. They were 1.91, 1.96, and 2.54 µg·h/ml, after
administration of 20, 30, and 40 mg/m2,
respectively. Despite an increase in the mean values with the doses, no
significant difference occurred (P = 0.148; NS). The
t1/2 elim (mean values: 40.2 min at 20
mg/m2, 55.2 min at 30 mg/m2
and 86.4 min at 40 mg/m2) and Vd (mean values:
10.8 liters/m2 at 20 mg/m2,
12.5 liters/m2 at 30 mg/m2
and 16.6 liters/m2 at 40
mg/m2) increased with dose, whereas Cl (mean
values: 192 ml/min/m2 at 20
mg/m2, 178 ml/min/m2 at 30
mg/m2, and 141
ml/min/m2 at 40 mg/m2)
decreased; however, statistical comparison of the pharmacokinetic
parameters revealed no significant difference in the
t1/2 elim (P = 0.0997), Cl
(P = 0.148), and Vd (P = 0.203;
Table 4
).
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Tumor Response
Disease response was determined in 20 patients. Two patients
(10%) had a partial response (>50% reduction) of an ovarian
carcinoma and an adenocarcinoma of unknown primary origin that
has been sustained for >4 months in both patients. One patient with
thymoma had stable disease for a period of up to 4 months. Disease
progression was observed in the other patients.
| DISCUSSION |
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The alkylating agents represent a chemically heterogeneous group of compounds, with a broad spectrum of applications in cancer treatment (4 , 30 , 31) . Infusional schedules for these agents demonstrate a clinical substantial experience and increasing application (cyclophosphamide and ifosfamide; Ref. 32 ). For melphalan, no study has been published with systemic infusional chemotherapy. The difficulty in using melphalan during long-term infusion was its low stability in 5% dextrose and 0.9% sodium chloride fluids. Therefore, the manufacturer recommended a use not exceeding 1.5 h after reconstitution in 0.9% sodium chloride. However, we have recently shown that the stability of melphalan can be increased using 3% sodium chloride (17) . Consequently, it becomes possible to consider the administration of melphalan by continuous infusion.
Preclinical studies suggested that prolonged infusion of melphalan might be more active than short infusion. Indeed, Bosanquet and Bird (7) , using in vitro chemosensitivity assays, attempted to reproduce a system that mimics the action of this drug in vivo. This physicochemical study showed that for melphalan a continuous drug incubation should be optimal. These authors suggest that an in vitro pharmacokinetic study should be undertaken to determine whether continuous exposure of melphalan would be preferable to the i.v. bolus administration commonly used. In a recent study, we have confirmed the interest of continuous infusion by in vitro experiments using human cancer cell lines (9) . Moreover, the pharmacokinetic parameters and the fact that alkylating agents are phase-specific support continuous infusion for this drug. Brox et al. (33) studied the effect of concentration and duration of exposure on the extent of melphalan-induced cross-linking in a human lymphoblastoid cell line, RPME 6410. The S-phase block became irreversible if cells were exposed to 1 µg/ml melphalan for 46 h. Similarly, Ross et al. (34) have shown that, in murine L1210 leukemia, the extent of DNA cross-linking increased for 5 h after exposure to melphalan.
We undertook a Phase I study of i.v. melphalan, given for 24 h, with the aim of identifying the MTD, the dose-limiting toxicities, and the pharmacokinetic characteristics of this drug in patients with refractory cancers. In our trial, performed on a small group of patients, the toxicity profile of melphalan after long-term infusion did not differ greatly from that reported after 1-h infusion (2) . However, for the same total-administered-dose, hematological and digestive toxicities were more pronounced after long-term infusion than after bolus administration. Long-term melphalan infusion caused dose-limiting neutropenia and thrombocytopenia at the MTD of 30 mg/m2; there were four grade 4 neutropenia (57%) at this dose level. Without autologous bone marrow support or peripheral-blood progenitor cells, this MTD dose was lower than that determined after 1-h infusion (90 mg/m2; Ref. 1 ). The main nonhematological toxicities associated with 24-h infusion melphalan were mild nausea and vomiting. In opposite to bolus injection, mucositis was not observed. These symptoms occurred during 816% of treatment courses but were usually of grade 12 severity and were not life-threatening. The median time-to-recovery of blood counts did not exceed 8 days, which suggests that, on average, a 3-week administration schedule may be feasible in these patients.
This study demonstrates the presence of significant interpatient pharmacokinetic variability. This variability has been demonstrated previously for melphalan after short-term infusion and after chronic oral administration (2) . We were, however, unable to identify clinical or biological parameters (age, performance status, serum albumin, and creatinine clearance) that could predict this interpatient variability. Css of melphalan (0.08, 0.12, and 0.21 µg/ml after 20, 30, and 40 mg/m2, respectively) were equal or higher than the concentrations inhibiting human tumor-cell proliferation in in vitro studies. Indeed, the melphalan concentration that inhibited 50% of growth in human myeloma 8226 cell line was 0.11 µg/ml for a 12-h exposure (9) . In our study, this concentration was exceeded in the plasma of all of the patients after 30 and 40 mg/m2. By comparison with the AUC observed by several authors after bolus administration of 1520 mg/m2 dose, the AUC obtained after long-term infusion of 20 mg/m2 was about 1.5 times higher (11 , 14 , 35) . Relationships have been found between AUC and doses and between Css and doses. Moreover, Cl, t1/2 elim, and Vd did not change statistically with dose, suggesting linear kinetics.
The short t1/2 elim of melphalan, its mechanism of action, and the first results from in vitro studies allow us to think that continuous venous infusion of melphalan may be superior to the short infusion in cancer patients, but its use in clinical practice remains to be determined. However, although the oral route of administration could offer greater flexibility in terms of schedule manipulation than the infusion and could increase the quality of life, systemic levels are very variable following oral administration (bioavailability, 2080%; Refs. 3 , 36 , 37 ), and the absorption of melphalan may be affected by food intake and associated drugs (14 , 38) . Moreover, the amount of drug intake and tablets per day and the increased risk of nausea and vomiting at doses of about 30 mg/m2 make this administration route difficult to perform.
As a conclusion to this study, we recommended a dose of 30 mg/m2 for Phase II trials of melphalan in 24-h continuous infusion.
| FOOTNOTES |
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1 To whom requests for reprints should be
addressed, at Laboratoire dOnco-Pharmacologie, Service pharmacie,
Centre Régional de Lutte contre le Cancer, 34298 Montpellier
Cedex 5, France. Phone: 33-4-67-61-31-95; Fax: 33-4-67-61-30-96. ![]()
2 The abbreviations used are: Vd, volume of distribution; MTD, maximum tolerated dose; ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group; Cl, clearance; t1/2 elim, elimination half-life; AUC, area under the plasma concentration-time curve; Css , observed plasma concentration at steady-state; HPLC, high-performance liquid chromatography; NS, not significant.
Received 6/ 4/99; revised 9/30/99; accepted 10/ 4/99.
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