Clinical pharmacokinetics of intravenous treosulfan in patients with advanced solid tumors.
Treosulfan (L-threitol- 1,4-bis-methanesulfonate, Ovastat) is a prodrug of a bifunctional alkylating agent with activity in ovarian carcinoma and other solid tumors. For a clinical and pharmacology study, patients with advanced, refractory, or resistant solid tumors were treated with a single-dose intravenous 30-min infusion of 8 or 10 g/m2 treosulfan. A sensitive method for the determination of treosulfan in plasma and urine by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography was developed. A total of 14 plasma and urine treosulfan pharmacokinetics determinations were analyzed in the 8-g/m2 group and 7 were analyzed in the 10-g/m2 group, the maximum tolerated dose for this group of pretreated patients. The terminal half-life of treosulfan was in the range of 1.8 h. AUC and Cmax values were significantly (P < 0.01) higher in the 10-g/m2 group (AUC 708+/-168 versus 977+/-182 microg ml(-1) h, Cmax 465+/-98 versus 597+/-94 microg/ml). The mean urinary excretion of the parent compound was about 25% of the total dose delivered over 48 h (range 5-49%), and about 20% was excreted during the first 6 h after administration. Currently, a clinical phase I pharmacokinetics and dose-escalation trial with autologous blood stem-cell support has been started at 20 g/m2 treosulfan using a 2-h infusion protocol.[1]References
- Clinical pharmacokinetics of intravenous treosulfan in patients with advanced solid tumors. Hilger, R.A., Harstrick, A., Eberhardt, W., Oberhoff, C., Skorzec, M., Baumgart, J., Seeber, S., Scheulen, M.E. Cancer Chemother. Pharmacol. (1998) [Pubmed]
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