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Electrochemotherapy

About: Electrochemotherapy is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 977 publications have been published within this topic receiving 26802 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evaluated and confirmed efficacy and safety of electrochemotherapy with bleomycin or cisplatin on cutaneous and subcutaneous tumour nodules of patients with malignant melanoma and other malignancies in a multicenter study.
Abstract: Purpose: To evaluate and confirm efficacy and safety of electrochemotherapy with bleomycin or cisplatin on cutaneous and subcutaneous tumour nodules of patients with malignant melanoma and other malignancies in a multicenter study. Patients and methods: This was a two year long prospective non-randomised study on 41 patients evaluable for response to treatment and 61 evaluable for toxicity. Four cancer centers enrolled patients with progressive cutaneous and subcutaneous metastases of any histologically proven cancer. The skin lesions were treated by electrochemotherapy, using application of electric pulses to the tumours for increased bleomycin or cisplatin delivery into tumour cells. The treatment was performed using intravenous or intratumoural drug injection, followed by application of electric pulses generated by a Cliniporator TM using plate or needle electrodes. Tumour response to electrochemotherapy as well as possible sideeffects with respect to the treatment approach, tumour histology and location of the tumour nodules and electrode type were evaluated. Results: An objective response rate of 85% (73.7% complete response rate) was achieved on the electrochemotherapy treated tumour nodules, regardless of tumour histology, and drug used or route of its administration. At 150 days after the treatment (median follow up was 133 days and range 60‐380 days) local tumour control rate for electrochemotherapy was 88% with bleomycin given intravenously, 73% with bleomycin given intratumourally and 75% with cisplatin given intratumourally, demonstrating that all three approaches were

773 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The antitumour effects of bleomycin in mice can be considerably potentiated by local electric pulses similar to those used in vitro.

640 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Eleven studies of electrochemotherapy of malignant cutaneous or subcutaneous lesions, e.g., metastases from melanoma, breast or head- and neck cancer, are reviewed, finding the treatment was well tolerated and could be performed on an out-patient basis.

565 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: ECT was shown to be an effective local treatment and was effective regardless of the histological type of the tumour, and offers an approach to the treatment of cutaneous and subcutaneous tumours in patients with minimal adverse side-effects and with a high response rate.
Abstract: Electrochemotherapy (ECT) enhances the effectiveness of chemotherapeutic agents by administering the drug in combination with short intense electric pulses. ECT is effective because electric pulses permeabilize tumour cell membranes and allow non-permeant drugs, such as bleomycin, to enter the cells. The aim of this study was to demonstrate the anti-tumour effectiveness of ECT with bleomycin on cutaneous and subcutaneous tumours. This article summarizes results obtained in independent clinical trials performed by five cancer centres. A total of 291 cutaneous or subcutaneous tumours of basal cell carcinoma (32), malignant melanoma (142), adenocarcinoma (30) and head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (87) were treated in 50 patients. Short and intense electric pulses were applied to tumours percutaneously after intravenous or intratumour administration of bleomycin. The tumours were measured and the response to the treatment evaluated 30 days after the treatment. Objective responses were obtained in 233 (85.3%) of the 273 evaluable tumours that were treated with ECT. Clinical complete responses were achieved in 154 (56.4%) tumours, and partial responses were observed in 79 (28.9%) tumours. The application of electric pulses to the patients was safe and well tolerated. An instantaneous contraction of the underlying muscles was noticed. Minimal adverse side-effects were observed. ECT was shown to be an effective local treatment. ECT was effective regardless of the histological type of the tumour. Therefore, ECT offers an approach to the treatment of cutaneous and subcutaneous tumours in patients with minimal adverse side-effects and with a high response rate.

490 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Dec 1993-Cancer
TL;DR: The authors report the first Phase I‐II trial of electrochemotherapy, a new antitumor treatment consisting of electrical pulses administered to the tumor several minutes after intravenous injection of bleomycin, observed on subcutaneously transplanted tumors and on spontaneously occurring mammary carcinomas.
Abstract: Background. Electrochemotherapy is a new antitumor treatment consisting of electrical pulses administered to the tumor several minutes after intravenous injection of bleomycin. In mice, important antitumor effects were observed on subcutaneously transplanted tumors and on spontaneously occurring mammary carcinomas. Cures were obtained after one single treatment combining bleomycin and electric pulses. In humans, permeation nodules seemed an adequate oncologic situation to assay this new procedure. The authors report the first Phase I-II trial of electrochemotherapy. Methods. Eight patients with 40 permeation nodules of head and neck squamous cell carcinomas were treated with 10 mg/m2 bleomycin intravenous bolus, followed by four or eight short (100 μseconds) and intense (1300 V/cm) pulses administered through two external electrodes located on each side of the treated nodule. Results. An instantaneous painless contraction of the underlying muscles was regularly observed. Neither local nor general side effects were observed, and electrochemotherapy was well tolerated. In addition, a clear local antitumor efficacy was found: 23 (57%) nodules were in clinical complete response within a few days. Conclusion. The absence of toxicity, the good tolerance by the patients, and the net antitumor effects observed are encouraging for additional electrochemotherapy developments in clinical oncology.

450 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202355
202296
202164
202081
201965
201852