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Effects of patupilone on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of warfarin in patients with advanced malignancies: a phase I clinical trial. Mol Cancer Ther 2011 Jan;10(1):209-17

Date

01/12/2011

Pubmed ID

21220503

DOI

10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-10-0774

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-78751521502 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   5 Citations

Abstract

Patupilone is a novel microtubule-targeting cytotoxic agent, which exerts its antitumor effect through microtubule stabilization. Pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and safety of warfarin when administered concomitantly with patupilone were investigated, and antitumor activity was assessed. This was a phase I, two-center, drug-drug interaction study. In the core phase of the study, treatment consisted of warfarin 20 mg orally (days 1 and 29) and patupilone 10 mg/m(2) i.v. (days 8 and 29). Patients benefiting from patupilone treatment continued treatment every 3 weeks (extension phase) until progression of disease, death, or unacceptable toxicity. Seventeen patients were treated (core phase, 17; extension, 9). The geometric mean ratios (comedication/monotherapy) for C(max) and area under the curve(0-168) of warfarin were near unity and their 90% confidence intervals were within the equivalence limits of 0.80 and 1.25. The half-life, plasma clearance, and International Normalized Ratio (INR) of warfarin were not affected by patupilone coadministration. The most common adverse events were diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, anorexia, dehydration, asthenia, and peripheral neuropathy. Five (29.4%) patients experienced grade 3 study drug-related adverse events (diarrhea, 17.6%; increased INR, 11.8%; dehydration, 5.9%; and neutropenia, 5.9%). One patient with triple-negative breast cancer (estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and HER2/neu negative) had a partial response (35% decrease in tumor measurements by Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors), and 11 had stable disease for 6 weeks or more (≥12 weeks, 6 patients). The pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of warfarin were not affected by patupilone coadministration, suggesting that patupilone has no clinically relevant effect on CYP2C9 metabolism. Patupilone showed antitumor activity in triple-negative breast cancer.

Author List

Tsimberidou AM, Takimoto CH, Moulder S, Uehara C, Mita M, Mita A, Urban P, Tan E, Wang Y, Vining D, Kurzrock R

Author

Razelle Kurzrock MD Center Associate Director, Professor in the Medicine department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Adult
Aged
Antineoplastic Agents
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
Drug Interactions
Epothilones
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Neoplasms
Warfarin
Young Adult