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Evaluation of merbarone (NSC 336628) in disseminated malignant melanoma
Authors:Milan Slavik  P Y Liu  Eric H Kraut  Ronald B Natale  Lawrence E Flaherty  Vernon K Sondak
Institution:(1) Wichita CCOP, University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita, Wichita, Kansas;(2) Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Wichita, Kansas;(3) Southwest Oncology Group Statistical Center and Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington;(4) Ohio State University School of Medicine, Columbus, Ohio;(5) University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California;(6) Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan;(7) University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA;(8) Medical Service, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita, 5500 E. Kellogg, 67218 Wichita, Kansas, USA
Abstract:Merbarone, NSC 336628, is an investigational anticancer drug with activity against experimental animal tumors including melanoma. This paper presents results of a Phase II clinical study of merbarone in patients with biopsy proven stage IV malignant melanoma without prior chemotherapy and with no evidence of CNS involvement. Thirty-five patients with median age 58 (range 27–81), with performance status 0–2 were treated with merbarone 1000 mg/m2/day for five days by intravenous continuous infusion repeated every 3 weeks. All patients (21 males and 14 females) were evaluable for toxicity. Two patients were not evaluable for response having been removed from protocol treatment due to toxicity and received other treatment during the first course of chemotherapy. Among the evaluable patients there was one complete response in a supraclavicular lymph node lasting four months and one partial liver response lasting three months. The remaining thirty-one patients were non-reponders. Of these one had a stable disease lasting 21 months. The overall objective response rate was 6% (2/35) with a 95% confidence interval of 1%–19%. Twenty-six of the 35 patients have died. The estimated median survival of the entire group was 9 months with a 95% confidence interval of six to eleven months. Renal toxicity was dose-limiting and manifested as increasing serum creatinine (54% of patients), proteinuria (51%) and hematuria (9%). One patient experienced grade 4 creatinine increase, proteinuria and acute renal failure. Other toxicities included nausea (71%), vomiting (51%), malaise (23%), weakness (20%), alopecia (17%), diarrhea (17%), anorexia (14%), transaminase (SGOT, SGPT) increase (14%), constipation (14%), alkaline phosphatase or 5primenucleotidase increase (9%), and fever (9%). Hematologictoxicity (granulocytopenia, leukopenia, and anemia) was generally mild and infrequent (29%, only one patient had grade 4 granulocytopenia). Overall 9 patients (26%) had at least one grade 3 toxicity. We conclude that merbarone at this dose and schedule has detectable but minimal activity in the treatment of metastatic malignant melanoma and given the significant renal toxicity this schedule does not merit further evaluation in this disease.
Keywords:Merbarone  phase II clinical study  malignant melanoma
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