Litcius/Paper detail

Pharmacokinetics of Carboplatin in Combination with Low-Dose Cyclophosphamide in Female Dogs with Mammary Carcinoma

Marília Carneiro de Araújo Machado, Priscila Akemi Yamamoto, Leandro Francisco Pippa, Natália Valadares de Moraes, Fabiane Maria Fernandes Neves, Ricardo Wagner Portela, Stella Maria Barrouin‐Melo, Anna Hielm‐Björkman, Ana Leonor Pardo Campos Godoy, Alessandra Estrela‐Lima

2022Animals18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This prospective study aimed to evaluate the effect of metronomic cyclophosphamide on carboplatin’s tolerability, efficacy, and pharmacokinetics in dogs with mammary carcinoma. Sixteen female dogs with mammary carcinoma were divided into groups: 300 mg/m2 intravenous (i.v.) carboplatin therapy (G1 = 8) or 300 mg/m2 i.v. carboplatin which was associated with 12.5 mg/m2 oral cyclophosphamide in a metronomic regimen (G2 = 8). The investigated animals underwent a clinical evaluation, a mastectomy, a carboplatin chemotherapy, and serial blood sampling for the pharmacokinetic analysis. The adverse events and survival rates were monitored. A non-compartmental analysis was applied to calculate the pharmacokinetic parameters of carboplatin in the 2nd and 4th chemotherapy cycles. Carboplatin PK showed high interindividual variability with a 10-fold variation in the area under the plasma concentration−time curve (AUC) in G1. The systemic plasma exposure to carboplatin was equivalent in both of the treatments considering the AUC and maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) values. Although the red blood cells (p < 0.0001), platelets (p = 0.0005), total leukocytes (p = 0.0002), and segmented neutrophils (p = 0.0007) were reduced in G2, the survival rate increased (p = 0.0044) when it was compared to G1. In conclusion, adding low daily doses of cyclophosphamide to a carboplatin therapy showed promising outcomes in female dogs with mammary tumors.

Topics & Concepts

CarboplatinCyclophosphamideOncologyPharmacokineticsMedicineMammary carcinomaInternal medicineCarcinomaChemotherapyCisplatinCancer Cells and MetastasisVeterinary Oncology ResearchBiopolymer Synthesis and Applications