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Phase I and pharmacological study of cytarabine and tanespimycin in relapsed and refractory acute leukemia
Authors:Kaufmann Scott H  Karp Judith E  Litzow Mark R  Mesa Ruben A  Hogan William  Steensma David P  Flatten Karen S  Loegering David A  Schneider Paula A  Peterson Kevin L  Maurer Matthew J  Smith B Douglas  Greer Jacqueline  Chen Yuhong  Reid Joel M  Ivy S Percy  Ames Matthew M  Adjei Alex A  Erlichman Charles  Karnitz Larry M
Institution:Division of Hematology, Department of Medicine, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55905, USA. kaufmann.scott@mayo.edu
Abstract:

Background

In preclinical studies the heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) inhibitor tanespimycin induced down-regulation of checkpoint kinase 1 (Chk1) and other client proteins as well as increased sensitivity of acute leukemia cells to cytarabine. We report here the results of a phase I and pharmacological study of the cytarabine + tanespimycin combination in adults with recurrent or refractory acute leukemia.

Design and Methods

Patients received cytarabine 400 mg/m2/day continuously for 5 days and tanespimycin infusions at escalating doses on days 3 and 6. Marrow mononuclear cells harvested before therapy, immediately prior to tanespimycin, and 24 hours later were examined by immunoblotting for Hsp70 and multiple Hsp90 clients.

Results

Twenty-six patients were treated at five dose levels. The maximum tolerated dose was cytarabine 400 mg/m2/day for 5 days along with tanespimycin 300 mg/m2 on days 3 and 6. Treatment-related adverse events included disseminated intravascular coagulation (grades 3 and 5), acute respiratory distress syndrome (grade 4), and myocardial infarction associated with prolonged exposure to tanespimycin and its active metabolite 17-aminogeldanamycin. Among 21 evaluable patients, there were two complete and four partial remissions. Elevations of Hsp70, a marker used to assess Hsp90 inhibition in other studies, were observed in more than 80% of samples harvested 24 hours after tanespimycin, but down-regulation of Chk1 and other Hsp90 client proteins was modest.

Conclusions

Because exposure to potentially effective concentrations occurs only for a brief time in vivo, at clinically tolerable doses tanespimycin has little effect on resistance-mediating client proteins in relapsed leukemia and exhibits limited activity in combination with cytarabine.
Keywords:cytarabine  tanespimycin  phase I study  pharmacological study  acute leukemia
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