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Department of Medical Oncology and Therapeutics Research, City of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, California 91010 [M. L. T., T. W. S., W. C., L. L., K. M., R. M., J. R., S. S., G. S., Y. Y., J. H. D.]; Division of Medical Oncology, University of Southern California-Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, Los Angeles, California 90033 [S. G., K. J, H-J. L.]; and Division of Medical Oncology, University of California, Davis Medical Center, Sacramento, California 95817 [D. G.]
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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The cellular pharmacology of dexrazoxane has been examined in beating, heart myocytes of adult rats (5) . Drug uptake of radiolabeled dexrazoxane was found to be extraordinarily rapid, with maximum levels of myocyte-associated radioactivity detected within 60 s of drug exposure; no further increase in intracellular dexrazoxane concentration was observed at longer exposure times. Efflux of the myocyte-associated radioactivity was equally rapid and essentially complete within 1 min. The uptake and efflux of the drug were energy and temperature independent and thus likely to be diffusion mediated.
Clinical antitumor activity of ICRF-159, the racemic form of dexrazoxane, has been demonstrated in patients with a variety of tumor types including non-small cell lung cancer (7) , colorectal carcinoma (8 , 9) , Kaposis sarcoma (10) , non-Hodgkins lymphoma (11) , acute leukemia (12) , and head and neck carcinoma (13) . The antitumor mechanisms of action of both dexrazoxane and ICRF-159 likely include iron chelation (14) , inhibition of DNA synthesis by bifunctional alkylation (15) , and inhibition of the enzymatic activity of topoisomerase II (16) .
Phase I studies of dexrazoxane have been performed previously using a variety of dosing schedules. Liesmann et al. (17) treated patients with doses ranging from 200 to 1500 mg/m2 as an i.v. bolus daily for 5 days every 3 weeks. Leukopenia was the dose-limiting toxicity, occurring at doses of 800 mg/m2 and above. Other toxicities included reversible liver function abnormalities, mild nausea and vomiting, low-grade fever, and alopecia. The recommended dose for further study was 800 mg/m2 i.v. daily for 5 days in heavily pretreated patients and 1250 mg/m2 i.v. daily for 5 days in less heavily pretreated patients. Von Hoff et al. (18) delivered dexrazoxane in doses from 500 to 1500 mg/m2 as an i.v. bolus daily for 3 days, repeated every 28 days. The dose-limiting toxicity in this trial was myelosuppression, with moderate to severe leukopenia and thrombocytopenia. Nonmyelosuppressive effects were comparable with those reported by Liesmann et al. (17) .
A Phase I study of dexrazoxane given by 48-h continuous i.v. infusion was performed by Koeller et al. (19) . The total dose ranged from 200 to 1000 mg/m2/48 h with treatment repeated every 34 weeks. Myelosuppression, particularly granulocytopenia, was dose limiting. Thrombocytopenia occurred in a small number of patients. Mild nausea, malaise, and alopecia were the only nonhematological toxicities encountered. The authors recommended a starting dose for Phase II trials of 1000 mg/m2 by a 48-h continuous i.v. infusion.
On the basis of the rapid, diffusion-mediated cellular uptake and short plasma half-life of dexrazoxane, combined with prolonged cellular retention of doxorubicin, we postulated that the cardioprotective and potential antineoplastic activity of dexrazoxane might be improved by prolonged infusion. Furthermore, because prior studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of 96-h infusions in diminishing the cardiac toxicity of doxorubicin (20 , 21) , we hypothesized that it would be useful for future trials to examine the feasibility of delivering dexrazoxane over a similar time frame. Therefore, this Phase I study evaluated the maximally tolerated dose and pharmacokinetics of dexrazoxane administered as a 96-h continuous i.v. infusion in patients with advanced malignancies. Therapy with G-CSF3 was given to all patients because myelosuppression was an established dose-limiting toxicity of this agent in previous trials.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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1.5 mg/dl or creatinine clearance
60 ml/min. For patients without liver metastases, bilirubin was required to be no greater than 1.5 mg/dl, and aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase less than three times the upper institutional limit of normal; for patients with known liver metastases, bilirubin could not exceed 3.0 mg/dl, and aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase were less than four times the upper limit of normal. Patients must have recovered from the toxicities of any prior chemotherapy or radiation therapy. Prior radiation therapy to >25% of the bone marrow was an exclusion criterion, as was prior nitrosourea therapy. All patients provided informed, voluntary consent and signed an informed consent document approved by the Institutional Review Boards of the participating institutions.
Pretreatment Evaluation.
Pretreatment evaluation included a complete history and physical examination, complete WBC count with differential, a chemistry panel that included liver function tests and serum creatinine, serum magnesium level, chest X-ray, electrocardiogram, and urinalysis. A 24-h urine collection for dexrazoxane, iron, zinc, and magnesium clearance was performed prior to the start of therapy and repeated on day 3 of the first infusion. Patients with bidimensionally measurable disease were required to have baseline evaluations within 4 weeks before the first course of therapy. Repeat tumor evaluations were performed after every two cycles of therapy.
Treatment Plan.
Dexrazoxane was administered as a 96-h continuous i.v. infusion repeated every 28 days. Treatment was delivered in either the inpatient or the outpatient setting. Prior to the initiation of the clinical trial, a stability study was performed at the City of Hope Analytical Pharmacology Core Facility. Dexrazoxane solutions at concentrations of 0.1, 0.5, and 1.0 mg/ml were prepared in 5% dextrose containing polycarbonate i.v. bags according to the manufacturers instructions. Solutions were kept in ambient light at room temperature, and aliquots were removed at various time points up to 24 h. Dexrazoxane concentrations were determined using the HPLC assay described below. All determinations were made in triplicate, and the results are depicted in Fig. 1
. As shown in the figure, dexrazoxane was found to be
90% of its starting concentration for up to 24 h in dextrose solutions containing either 0.1 or 0.5 mg/ml. Therefore, all patients received four consecutive 24-h infusions with their total daily dose diluted to
0.5 mg/ml in 5% dextrose.
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Evaluation of Toxicity and Efficacy.
All patients completed at least one cycle of protocol therapy and were evaluable for toxicity. Efficacy was determined in patients with bidimensionally measurable lesions. Complete response was defined as the disappearance of all objective evidence of disease on two separate measurements at least 4 weeks apart. Partial response was defined as a decrease of
50% in the sum of the products of the diameters of the measurable lesion(s), without evidence of new lesions for two consecutive evaluations separated by at least 4 weeks. The same criteria were used whether single or multiple lesions were evaluated. Disease progression was defined as an increase of
25% in the area of the measurable lesion(s) over the size at the maximum regression or the appearance of new lesions. Disease not meeting these criteria for response or progression was considered stable.
Pharmacokinetic Studies.
For determination of dexrazoxane plasma pharmacokinetics, peripheral blood samples were obtained during the first course of therapy at the following times: prior to the start of the infusion; at 4, 6, 24, 48, 72, and 96 h during the infusion; and then at 10, 20, 40, 60, 120, 360, and 720 min after the end of the infusion. At each time point, 5 ml of blood were collected in vacuum tubes containing sodium heparin. Samples were centrifuged at 1500 x g for 10 min, and the plasma was separated. Fifty µl of phosphoric acid (42.5% v/v) were added to each 1 ml of plasma to prevent ex vivo hydrolysis of dexrazoxane. Plasma was stored at -70°C until analysis by HPLC. Twenty-four-h urine collections for dexrazoxane, iron, zinc, and magnesium urinary clearances were performed prior to the start of the infusion and on day 3 of the infusion.
Because of the low plasma concentration of dexrazoxane expected when the drug is administered as a 96-h continuous infusion, a new, sensitive HPLC method was required. Therefore, a novel assay using gradient separation was developed specifically for this trial. Prior to HPLC analysis, an acid extraction step was used to remove plasma proteins and other acid-insoluble materials. After addition of ICRF-192 as an internal standard (generously provided by Pharmacia-Upjohn, Kalamazoo, MI), 40 µl of 0.6 M trichloroacetic acid were added to 1 ml of plasma, and the sample was centrifuged at 6000 x g for 2 min to pellet the insoluble material. The resulting supernatant was then neutralized by addition of 1 ml of a mixture of tri-n-octyamine:trichloro-trifluorothane (21.9:78.1% v/v). The sample was again centrifuged at 6000 x g for 2 min. Finally, 70 µl of 0.5 M phosphate buffer were added to 0.5 ml of supernatant to adjust the pH to 7.0, and 100 µl were injected on the column.
The HPLC method consisted of gradient separation across a C18 column (150 x 4.6 mm; Phenomenex, Torrance, CA) and UV detection at a wavelength of 209 nm. Mobile phase A was 0.01 M phosphate buffer (pH 4.7) with 0.1 mM EDTA, and mobile phase B was 100% methanol. The gradient program was as follows: linear increase from 2 to 7% B by 8 min, hold at 7% B until 18 min; linear increase from 7 to 15% B by 22 min, hold at 15% B until 31 min; linear decrease from 15 to 2% B by 33 min; and equilibrate at 2% B until 40 min. The flow rate was constant at 1.2 ml/min. Using the HPLC conditions above, the retention times for dexrazoxane and the internal standard were 15.4 and 28.8 min, respectively. The mean percentage of recovery was 101.1% across the entire range of the standard curve. Inter- and intra-day precision and accuracy were within 10% of the target value. The lower limit of detection was 10 ng/ml, and the lower limit of quantitation, defined as a peak height:baseline noise ratio of
3, was 20 ng/ml.
A model-independent analysis of the dexrazoxane plasma concentration-versus-time data was performed to determine the secondary pharmacokinetic parameters. Dexrazoxane plasma AUC was estimated by linear trapezoids, with the terminal area extrapolated to infinity using each patients end of infusion concentration to determine the rate of decay (Kel). Elimination half-life (t1/2) was defined as 0.693/Kel, and dexrazoxane steady-state plasma concentrations (Css) were determined by taking the average of the levels measured at 48, 72, and 96 h during the infusion. Dexrazoxane clearance at steady-state (CLss) was determined from the equation:
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| RESULTS |
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2-fold dose range).
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6 µM). In contrast, none of the patients (0 of 17) with a Css <1300 µg/l experienced a dose-limiting toxicity, including 2 patients with Css of 1245 and 1290 µg/l.
Effect of Treatment and Response to Therapy.
The number of cycles administered to each cohort of patients is listed in Table 5
. One patient treated at dose level 166.25 mg/m2/day with metastatic breast cancer developed rapid disease progression with substantial decline in performance status during therapy. This patient was felt to be inevaluable for toxicity and was replaced by one additional patient at that dose level. Twelve patients received one cycle of therapy, five received two cycles, two received three cycles, and three received four cycles. There were no objective responses in the 21 evaluable patients.
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| DISCUSSION |
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The MTD of dexrazoxane when given as a 96-h continuous infusion is 665 mg/m2/96 h, consistent with the recommended dose delivered by short infusion (500750 mg/m2) in combination with conventional doses of doxorubicin. The mean dexrazoxane Css at the MTD is 1075 µg/l (4.9 µM). Thrombocytopenia, gastrointestinal toxicity, and hypertension were the dose-limiting toxicities of dexrazoxane administered by 96-h continuous i.v. infusion followed by G-CSF support. In prior studies of dexrazoxane given as a short i.v. infusion, myelosuppression (particularly thrombocytopenia) was the major toxicity. The gastrointestinal toxicity and hypertension observed in our patients were most likely attributable to unrelated medical problems; however, a direct effect of dexrazoxane cannot be excluded. Interestingly, we observed a sharp increase in the occurrence dose-limiting toxicities when the Css exceeded 1300 µg/l (5.9 µM), suggesting a steep dose-response relationship.
The recommended dose of dexrazoxane when used in combination with doxorubicin is 10 times the doxorubicin dose on a mg per mg basis. Although the MTD (on a mg basis) of dexrazoxane for the current trial is only four times the dose of doxorubicin used in current City of Hope bone marrow transplant trials (165 mg/m2), pharmacokinetic studies demonstrate that steady-state plasma levels of dexrazoxane at the MTD are
18 times greater than doxorubicin (22)
. In vitro studies demonstrate complete cardioprotection of rat heart myocytes from doxorubicin-induced heart damage if dexrazoxane is present in 10-fold excess (5)
. Therefore, it is likely that dexrazoxane given at a dose of
166 mg/m2/day will be effective as a cardioprotective agent in combination with infusional doxorubicin at doses of up to 165 mg/m2/96 h.
The plasma pharmacokinetics of dexrazoxane by a number of different infusion schedules has been studied previously (23, 24, 25) , and the pharmacokinetic data from the current trial are in good general agreement with prior results. Earhart et al. (23) studied the pharmacokinetics of 1000 mg/m2 dexrazoxane given as either a 30-min, 8-h, or 48-h infusion. The investigators concluded that the systemic clearance of dexrazoxane was not dependent on the infusion rate. The mean dexrazoxane Css achieved when 1000 mg/m2 was delivered over 48 h was 2900 µg/l, compared with 1340 µg/l when the same total dose was given over 96 h on the current study. These data taken together suggest that the pharmacokinetics of dexrazoxane are linear over a very wide range of doses and schedules. Urinary recovery of dexrazoxane has been reported to be 48% of the administered dose (23) , compared with 41% on the current trial.
Von Hoff et al. (18) reported that urinary excretion of Fe2+ and Zn2+ were increased 10-fold during treatment with dexrazoxane, whereas clearance of Mg2+, Ca2+, and Cu2+ were unchanged. The current study confirms these results, with mean increases in Fe2+ and Zn2+ urinary clearance of 4.8- and 4.5-fold, respectively. The smaller increase in urinary metal excretion is likely attributable to a greater amount of dexrazoxane being administered over a shorter time period when given as a short rather than a prolonged infusion. In the current study, no relationship between dexrazoxane exposure and urinary clearance of metals could be identified over the fairly small dose and Css range studied (2- and 3-fold, respectively). Moreover, there was no association between the change in either Fe2+ or Zn2+ clearance and the occurrence of dose-limiting toxicity. The mean urinary excretion of Fe2+ during a 96-h continuous infusion of dexrazoxane is 209 ± 266 µg/24 h or 836 µg/96 h, assuming a constant rate.
Dexrazoxane was originally investigated as an anticancer agent in the 1970s and 1980s. Most of the single-agent studies of dexrazoxane investigated the use of short infusions given daily for 35 days (15
, 17
, 18)
. Interestingly, the MTDs of dexrazoxane determined using these short infusion schedules are approximately 1015 times higher than the MTD determined on the current study using a 96-h continuous infusion schedule. In one Phase I study of dexrazoxane given by 48-h continuous infusion (19)
, the MTD is
2-fold higher than that of the current study. When combined, these clinical data provide strong evidence for schedule-dependent dexrazoxane toxicity in vivo.
The discovery that dexrazoxane inhibits the catalytic activity of topoisomerase II (16 , 26 , 27) has renewed interest in this compound as an antitumor agent. However, there is a paucity of in vitro data regarding the cytotoxic effects of prolonged exposures of dexrazoxane. The limited data that exist ignore the significant chemical instability of dexrazoxane under tissue culture conditions (28) . Once added to culture medium, dexrazoxane is rapidly converted to its ring-opened chelating form (29 , 30) . It has been determined that dexrazoxane itself, and not its hydrolysis products, is responsible for tumor cell killing in vitro. Hasinoff et al. (31) have shown that whereas dexrazoxane inhibits topoisomerase II, its ring-opened hydrolysis products do not. High millimolar concentrations of dexrazoxane hydrolysis products are required in vitro for cytotoxicity,4 compared with micromolar concentrations for the parent compound. Schedule-dependent cytotoxicity observed both in vivo and in vitro is consistent with evidence suggesting that topoisomerase II is a target for dexrazoxane. Moreover, given the steep dexrazoxane Css-toxicity relationships observed in this study, inhibition of topoisomerase II by dexrazoxane may be an all-or-nothing phenomenon.
Because of the lack of in vitro cytotoxicity data for prolonged dexrazoxane exposures, we undertook a series of laboratory studies to provide a context for the plasma levels measured in this clinical trial. However, because of the instability of dexrazoxane in tissue culture medium (t1/2,
3 h), a method for maintaining constant drug levels was required. As reported previously (28)
, we have developed methodology allowing us to control drug levels for >96 h using ALZET osmotic pumps (ALZA Scientific, Palo Alto, CA) to simulate a continuous infusion in vitro. By applying this procedure, we demonstrated that the levels of dexrazoxane achievable in vivo by a 96-h infusion schedule (
5 µM) are above the concentrations required to induce cytotoxicity in K562 cells, an erythroleukemic cell line (IC50, 3.6 µM; Ref. 32
).
The Phase I study described here is the first trial of dexrazoxane by 96-h continuous infusion. It is now clear from clinical and laboratory investigations that dexrazoxane acts both as a cardioprotective and a cytotoxic agent. The pharmacokinetic analyses performed in support of this trial have identified that steady-state dexrazoxane concentrations in the range of 35 µM for 96 h are achievable in vivo without occurrence of unacceptable toxicity. In light of these data, new trials of dexrazoxane in combination with anthracyclines and other chemotherapeutic agents are now being designed to take advantage of the unique pharmacology of dexrazoxane. For example, the results of the current study have been used to design a trial combining simultaneous 96-h continuous infusions of dexrazoxane with high-dose doxorubicin that is ongoing at the City of Hope. It is hypothesized that giving both agents as concurrent 96-h infusions will decrease the cardiotoxicity associated with high-dose doxorubicin. We anticipate that this combination will allow us to administer dose-intensive doxorubicin more safely to patients who have received substantial doses of anthracycline prior to high-dose therapy. Moreover, because of the clinical interest in the combination of topoisomerase I and II inhibitors, two Phase I trials were initiated at the City of Hope for patients with hematological malignancies and solid tumors that combine dexrazoxane and the topoisomerase I inhibitor, topotecan. Given the favorable safety profile of infusional dexrazoxane and the demonstration that µM concentrations are sustainable for long periods in vivo, it is likely that the role of dexrazoxane will expand as it develops as both a cardioprotectant and an antineoplastic agent.
| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Supported by NIH Grant U01 CA 62505, NIH Grant 5P30 CA 33572, and Pharmacia-Upjohn (Kalamazoo, MI). ![]()
2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at City of Hope National Medical Center, 1500 East Duarte Road, Duarte, CA 91010. Phone: (626) 359-8111; Fax: (626) 930-5461. ![]()
3 The abbreviations used are: G-CSF, granulocyte-colony stimulating factor; HPLC, high-performance liquid chromatography; AUC, area under the curve. ![]()
4 B. Hasinoff, personal communication. ![]()
Received 8/16/00; revised 3/14/01; accepted 3/16/01.
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