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Preliminary Clinical and Pharmacologic Investigation of Photodynamic Therapy with the Silicon Phthalocyanine Photosensitizer Pc 4 for Primary or Metastatic Cutaneous Cancers

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) for cutaneous malignancies has been found to be an effective treatment with a range of photosensitizers. The phthalocyanine Pc 4 was developed initially for PDT of primary or metastatic cancers in the skin. A Phase I trial was initiated to evaluate the safety and pharmacok...

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Autores principales: Kinsella, Timothy James, Baron, Elma D., Colussi, Valdir C., Cooper, Kevin D., Hoppel, Charles L., Ingalls, Stephen T., Kenney, Malcolm E., Li, Xiaolin, Oleinick, Nancy L., Stevens, Seth R., Remick, Scot C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Research Foundation 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3355859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22649754
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2011.00014
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author Kinsella, Timothy James
Baron, Elma D.
Colussi, Valdir C.
Cooper, Kevin D.
Hoppel, Charles L.
Ingalls, Stephen T.
Kenney, Malcolm E.
Li, Xiaolin
Oleinick, Nancy L.
Stevens, Seth R.
Remick, Scot C.
author_facet Kinsella, Timothy James
Baron, Elma D.
Colussi, Valdir C.
Cooper, Kevin D.
Hoppel, Charles L.
Ingalls, Stephen T.
Kenney, Malcolm E.
Li, Xiaolin
Oleinick, Nancy L.
Stevens, Seth R.
Remick, Scot C.
author_sort Kinsella, Timothy James
collection PubMed
description Photodynamic therapy (PDT) for cutaneous malignancies has been found to be an effective treatment with a range of photosensitizers. The phthalocyanine Pc 4 was developed initially for PDT of primary or metastatic cancers in the skin. A Phase I trial was initiated to evaluate the safety and pharmacokinetic profiles of systemically administered Pc 4 followed by red light (Pc 4-PDT) in cutaneous malignancies. A dose-escalation study of Pc 4 (starting dose 0.135 mg/m(2)) at a fixed light fluence (135 J/cm(2) of 675-nm light) was initiated in patients with primary or metastatic cutaneous malignancies with the aim of establishing the maximum tolerated dose (MTD). Blood samples were taken at intervals over the first 60 h post-PDT for pharmacokinetic analysis, and patients were evaluated for toxicity and tumor response. A total of three patients (two females with breast cancer and one male with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma) were enrolled and treated over the dose range of 0.135 mg/m(2) (first dose level) to 0.54 mg/m(2) (third dose level). Grade 3 erythema within the photoirradiated area was induced in patient 2, and transient tumor regression in patient 3, in spite of the low photosensitizer doses. Pharmacokinetic observations fit a three-compartment exponential elimination model with an initial rapid distribution phase (∼0.2 h) and relatively long terminal elimination phase (∼28 h), Because of restrictive exclusion criteria and resultant poor accrual, the trial was closed before MTD could be reached. While the limited accrual to this initial Phase I study did not establish the MTD nor establish a complete pharmacokinetic and safety profile of intravenous Pc 4-PDT, these preliminary data support further Phase I testing of this new photosensitizer.
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spelling pubmed-33558592012-05-30 Preliminary Clinical and Pharmacologic Investigation of Photodynamic Therapy with the Silicon Phthalocyanine Photosensitizer Pc 4 for Primary or Metastatic Cutaneous Cancers Kinsella, Timothy James Baron, Elma D. Colussi, Valdir C. Cooper, Kevin D. Hoppel, Charles L. Ingalls, Stephen T. Kenney, Malcolm E. Li, Xiaolin Oleinick, Nancy L. Stevens, Seth R. Remick, Scot C. Front Oncol Oncology Photodynamic therapy (PDT) for cutaneous malignancies has been found to be an effective treatment with a range of photosensitizers. The phthalocyanine Pc 4 was developed initially for PDT of primary or metastatic cancers in the skin. A Phase I trial was initiated to evaluate the safety and pharmacokinetic profiles of systemically administered Pc 4 followed by red light (Pc 4-PDT) in cutaneous malignancies. A dose-escalation study of Pc 4 (starting dose 0.135 mg/m(2)) at a fixed light fluence (135 J/cm(2) of 675-nm light) was initiated in patients with primary or metastatic cutaneous malignancies with the aim of establishing the maximum tolerated dose (MTD). Blood samples were taken at intervals over the first 60 h post-PDT for pharmacokinetic analysis, and patients were evaluated for toxicity and tumor response. A total of three patients (two females with breast cancer and one male with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma) were enrolled and treated over the dose range of 0.135 mg/m(2) (first dose level) to 0.54 mg/m(2) (third dose level). Grade 3 erythema within the photoirradiated area was induced in patient 2, and transient tumor regression in patient 3, in spite of the low photosensitizer doses. Pharmacokinetic observations fit a three-compartment exponential elimination model with an initial rapid distribution phase (∼0.2 h) and relatively long terminal elimination phase (∼28 h), Because of restrictive exclusion criteria and resultant poor accrual, the trial was closed before MTD could be reached. While the limited accrual to this initial Phase I study did not establish the MTD nor establish a complete pharmacokinetic and safety profile of intravenous Pc 4-PDT, these preliminary data support further Phase I testing of this new photosensitizer. Frontiers Research Foundation 2011-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC3355859/ /pubmed/22649754 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2011.00014 Text en Copyright © 2011 Kinsella, Baron, Colussi, Cooper, Hoppel, Ingalls, Kenney, Li, Oleinick, Stevens and Remick. http://www.frontiersin.org/licenseagreement This is an open-access article subject to a non-exclusive license between the authors and Frontiers Media SA, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in other forums, provided the original authors and source are credited and other Frontiers conditions are complied with.
spellingShingle Oncology
Kinsella, Timothy James
Baron, Elma D.
Colussi, Valdir C.
Cooper, Kevin D.
Hoppel, Charles L.
Ingalls, Stephen T.
Kenney, Malcolm E.
Li, Xiaolin
Oleinick, Nancy L.
Stevens, Seth R.
Remick, Scot C.
Preliminary Clinical and Pharmacologic Investigation of Photodynamic Therapy with the Silicon Phthalocyanine Photosensitizer Pc 4 for Primary or Metastatic Cutaneous Cancers
title Preliminary Clinical and Pharmacologic Investigation of Photodynamic Therapy with the Silicon Phthalocyanine Photosensitizer Pc 4 for Primary or Metastatic Cutaneous Cancers
title_full Preliminary Clinical and Pharmacologic Investigation of Photodynamic Therapy with the Silicon Phthalocyanine Photosensitizer Pc 4 for Primary or Metastatic Cutaneous Cancers
title_fullStr Preliminary Clinical and Pharmacologic Investigation of Photodynamic Therapy with the Silicon Phthalocyanine Photosensitizer Pc 4 for Primary or Metastatic Cutaneous Cancers
title_full_unstemmed Preliminary Clinical and Pharmacologic Investigation of Photodynamic Therapy with the Silicon Phthalocyanine Photosensitizer Pc 4 for Primary or Metastatic Cutaneous Cancers
title_short Preliminary Clinical and Pharmacologic Investigation of Photodynamic Therapy with the Silicon Phthalocyanine Photosensitizer Pc 4 for Primary or Metastatic Cutaneous Cancers
title_sort preliminary clinical and pharmacologic investigation of photodynamic therapy with the silicon phthalocyanine photosensitizer pc 4 for primary or metastatic cutaneous cancers
topic Oncology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3355859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22649754
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2011.00014
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