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A randomized trial comparing mitoxantrone with doxorubicin in patients with stage IV breast cancer.

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TLDR
Mitoxantrone appears to be as active as doxorubicin in patients with stage IV breast cancer previously treated with chemotherapy; however, mitoxanrone causes significantly less nausea, vomiting, stomatitis and alopecia at doses which induce equal or greater myelosuppression than doxorbicin, and seems to be less cardiotoxic.
Abstract
Mitoxantrone (Novantrone®; dihydroxyanthracenedione) is an anthraquinone previously shown to be active in human breast cancer. It appears to have less toxicity than doxorubicin. Results of this phase II–III randomized cross-over trial to determine the relative efficacy and toxicity of mitoxantrone in comparison to doxorubicin, are presented. Patients with measurable, recurrent breast cancer with limited prior chemotherapy with or without radiotherapy for metastatic disease, and who had not been exposed to prior doxorubicin, were randomized to receive either mitoxantrone or doxorubicin every three weeks with crossover on progression. Response rates, duration of remission, time to treatment failure, and drug toxicity, including cardiac toxicity evaluated with serial radionuclide angiocardiography, were evaluated. Differences in the response rates for the two groups were not statistically significant. Neither time to treatment failure nor duration of response are significantly different (p>0.05). With respect to toxicity, mitoxantrone treated patients consistently exhibited a lower incidence and less severe drug toxicity as compared to their doxorubicin-treated counterparts. Cardiac toxicity was carefully monitored and thus four patients on doxorubicin have had drug related congestive heart failure, as compared to none on mitoxantrone.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Mitoxantrone: a new anticancer drug with significant clinical activity.

TL;DR: The drug has antiviral, antibacterial, antiprotozoal, immunomodulating, and antineoplastic properties and is mutagenic in some animal systems and is a promising new agent in the treatment of cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mitoxantrone, More than Just Another Topoisomerase II Poison.

TL;DR: A comprehensive overview of the drug's molecular, biochemical, and cellular pharmacology is presented, beginning with the cardiotoxic nature of its predecessor doxorubicin and how these properties shaped the pharmacology of mitoxantrone itself.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of short-term and continuous chemotherapy (mitozantrone) for advanced breast cancer.

TL;DR: Short courses of single-agent chemotherapy can produce similar therapeutic results to long-term chemotherapy, which has major implications for cost, resource allocation, and toxicity of therapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anthrapyrazole CI941: a highly active new agent in the treatment of advanced breast cancer.

TL;DR: CI941 is a very active and well-tolerated new agent in the treatment of advanced breast cancer, with neutropenia being the main toxicity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cyclophosphamide and fluorouracil combined with mitoxantrone versus doxorubicin for breast cancer: superiority of doxorubicin.

TL;DR: In patients with advanced breast cancer, CAF was associated with longer survival than was CNF, with an increase in alopecia, but not in other toxicities.
References
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Journal Article

Phase I Clinical Investigation of 1,4-Dihydroxy-5,8-bis{{ {2-[(2-hydroxyethyl)amino]ethyl}amino}}-9,10-anthracenedione Dihydrochloride (NSC 301739), a New Anthracenedione

TL;DR: Phase II studies of 1,4-dihydroxy-5,8-bis(( (2-[(2-hydroxyethyl)amino]ethyl)-amino))-9,10-anthracenedione dihydrochloride are planned at a starting dose of 12 mg/sq m as a single dose repeated at 21- to 28-day intervals.
Journal ArticleDOI

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