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Pharmacologically based dosing of etoposide: a means of safely increasing dose intensity.
109
Citations
15
References
1991
Year
Bone Marrow FunctionDose IntensityPharmacotherapyExperimental PharmacologyMolecular PharmacologyThrombosisLaboratory HematologyPharmacological StudyHematologyDrug MonitoringClinical ChemistryLaboratory MedicinePharmacokinetic ModelingTransfusion MedicinePharmacologyPharmacological IssueVp16 ClearanceClinical PharmacologyIndividualized DosingMedicinePharmacokineticsBlood TransfusionDrug Discovery
We have previously demonstrated that individualized dosing of etoposide (VP16) by 72-hour infusion is feasible and that the extent of leukopenia is a function of plasma concentration, pretreatment WBC (WBCp), albumin (ALB), performance status (PS), and bone marrow function (based on transfusion requirements). In the current study, 45 patients were randomized between a fixed dose of VP16 (125 mg/m2/d) versus individualized dosing to a target WBC nadir (WBCN) of 1,700/microL. The total dose was increased by an average of 22% in the latter patients (459 +/- 130 mg/m2 v 375 mg/m2, P = .002). This was associated with a decrease in both the mean WBCN (1,510 +/- 950 v 2,500 +/- 1,420/microL, P = .013) and in the variability of the WBCN (P = .039). The VP16 clearance (mL/min) was not correlated with body surface area. Partial responses were observed in one patient each with hepatoma and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. We conclude that pharmacologically based dosing may be a means of increasing dose intensity without increasing the incidence of life-threatening toxicity due to a decrease in variability around a target WBC.
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