A Phase II Study of the Efficacy of Diamminedichloroplatinum (Cisplatin) for the Control of Locally Recurrent and Intransit Malignant Melanoma of the Extremities Using Tourniquet Outflow-Occlusion Techniques
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Annals of Surgery
- Vol. 209 (1) , 73-80
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000658-198901000-00011
Abstract
A phase II trial was conducted with IS patients (mean age of 65.7 years) with locally recurrent or intransit melanoma of the extremities. After total outflow occlusion with pneumatic tourniquet, the cell-cycle nonspecific anti-neoplastic agent cis-diam-minedicholoroplatinum (CDDP) was infused intra-arterially in a mean dose of 26.7 mg/m2 per infusion (2.6 infusions per patient). The aim of this study was to determine the efficacy of CDDP infusion for control of intransit and recurrent melanoma of the extremities. Three to four weeks postinfusion, all visible residual disease was resected. Partial remissions were observed in ten patients (67%); five patients achieved stable disease status. No patient had complete regression of disease. At an average follow-up interval of 18.3 months (range 4–44 months), the mean local/regional disease-free survival was 14.8 months. Eighty per cent of patients (twelve of 15) had local/regional control of disease at an average follow-up of 14.8 months after CDDP infusion and surgical resection. Of five melanoma-related deaths, three patients had had no local/regional recurrence at the time of their demise. Three compartment syndromes resulted as a complication of the infusional therapy and occurred within 1–3 days of the treatment. In vitro growth of melanoma from lymph nodes draining the infused area was seen in all subjects studied. Outgrowth from tumor within the tourniquet infusion area was observed in two patients, both of whom experienced recurrences clinically at 24-months' postinfusion. Pharmacokinetic data of total CDDP concentrations from tissue and blood (n = 4) were available from pretreatment to 1 hour post-therapy. Biopsy data from patients pre- and post-treatment suggest substantial tumor uptake of CDDP as compared to local or distal normal skin, with minimal CDDP loss to the systemic circulation. Pharma-cologic and clinical data of this phase II trial suggest that intra-arterial infusion with tourniquet outflow-occlusion augments tumor tissue levels of CDDP within the infused extremity and enhances local control of high-risk and intransit disease.This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Isolation and visualization of Met‐72‐positive, metastatic variants present in B16 melanoma tumor massesJournal of Cellular Biochemistry, 1988
- Isolation perfusion with cisplatin for malignant melanoma of the limbsCancer, 1987
- Arterial Infusion of Dacarbazine and Cisplatin for Recurrent Regionally Confined MelanomaArchives of Surgery, 1985
- A Prospective Randomized Study of Regional Extremity Perfusion in Patients with Malignant MelanomaAnnals of Surgery, 1984
- Pharmacologic rationale for regional drug delivery.Journal of Clinical Oncology, 1984
- Clinical pharmacokinetics of intraarterial cisplatin in humans.Journal of Clinical Oncology, 1983
- Clinical pharmacology of intraarterial cis-diamminedichloroplatinum(II).1983
- Intra-arterial infusion therapy with 5-(3,3-dimeth yl-1-triazeno) imidazole-4-carboxamide (NSC 45388) for malignant melanomaCancer, 1973
- Intra-arterial therapy of melanoma with dimethyl triazeno imidazole carboxamide (NSC-45388)Cancer, 1971
- Prolonged and Continuous Regional Arterial Infusion Chemotherapy in Patients With MelanomaJAMA, 1969