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Vol. 289, Issue 1, 231-235, April 1999
Laboratoire "Rythmes Biologiques et Chronothérapeutique,"
Institut du Cancer et d'Immunogénétique, Hôpital
Paul Brousse, Villejuif, France (E.F., S.A., G.L., F.L.); and
Pierre
Fabre Oncologie, Boulogne-Billancourt, France (M.V., F.B.)
The relevance of chronopharmacology for improving tolerability and
antitumor efficacy of the antimitotic drug vinorelbine was investigated
in female B6D2F1 mice standardized with 12 h of light
and 12 h of darkness. A single i.v. vinorelbine dose (26 mg/kg)
was given to 279 mice at 7, 11, 19, or 23 hours after light onset
(HALO). Bone marrow necrosis and leukopenia were nearly twice as large
in the mice injected at 7 HALO as compared with those treated at 19 HALO (ANOVA: p < .001 and p = 0.004, respectively). The relevance of vinorelbine dosing time for
antitumor efficacy was assessed in 672 P388 leukemia-bearing mice.
Vinorelbine was injected as a single dose (20, 24, 26, or 30 mg/kg) or
weekly (20, 24, 26, or 28 mg/kg/injection × 3) at one of six
circadian times, 4 h apart. A significant correlation between
single dose and median survival time was limited to vinorelbine
administration at 19 or 23 HALO. An increase in the vinorelbine weekly
dose shortened median survival time in the mice treated at 7 HALO (20 mg/kg: 29 days; 24 mg/kg: 17 days; and 26 mg/kg: 6 days) but
significantly improved it in those treated at 19 HALO (20 mg/kg: 28.5 days; 24 mg/kg: 32 days; and 26 mg/kg: 36 days). The study demonstrates the circadian rhythm dependence of maximum tolerated dose and the need
to deliver maximum tolerated dose at the least toxic time to achieve
survival improvement through chronotherapy. This may be obtained with
an evening administration of vinorelbine in cancer patients.
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