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Accidental extravasation of anthracyclines, e.g. doxorubicin and its derivative epirubicin, may cause progressive tissue destruction including serious damage of the skin, the subcutaneous tissue, muscles, and nerves.
The patient may suffer from acute local symptoms such as pain and swelling, which may progress into blistering and necrosis. Subsequently dysesthesia, skin atrophy, disfigurement, and impaired limb function may be the consequence.
Surgical removal of all affected tissue is required and the debridement often necessitates split skin grafting. The patient is thus subjected to the distress of major surgery, which in turn leads to delay of further cytotoxic treatment.
Preclinical animal studies as well as a clinical multicenter phase II trial have demonstrated a highly significant efficacy of dexrazoxane in preventing tissue destruction caused by anthracyclines.
This confirmatory trial will determine the effect of Topotect® (dexrazoxane) as an acute antidote in patients with anthracycline extravasation.
Orphan drug status TopoTarget A/S was granted designation for Topotect® as an orphan medical product for the treatment of anthracycline extravasations by the European Commission in September 2001 and by the FDA in ???.
Purpose
Primary objectives:
• To prevent progression of the anthracycline extravasation lesion as tissue ulceration and necrosis requiring surgical intervention
Secondary objectives:
Trial design This is an open-label, non-randomised phase II/III trial. Thirty -five evaluable patients with anthracycline extravasations will be treated.
Extravasation is determined by the presence of pain, and/or swelling, and/or redness at the site where anthracycline leakage is suspected to have occurred. The extravasations are subsequently confirmed in each patient by fluorescence microscopy of at least two punch biopsies at the time of the accident.
Success criteria The prevention of surgical intervention, necrosis and late sequelae evaluated 3 months after the extravasation.
Safety features
Medical Treatment Patients are treated with intravenous infusion of Topotect® administered once daily on three consecutive days at the following doses: 1,000 mg/m2 + 1,000 mg/m2 + 500 mg/m2. The first dose is administered as soon as possible and within 6 hours of the extravasation and the next two doses at 24 and 48 hours after the first infusion.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
All cancer patients treated with anthracyclines
Informed consent must be obtained from the patient
Patients suspected to have been exposed to extravasation (leakage) of anthracycline, defined as:
Suspicion of anthracycline extravasation from a central venous access device
The Topotect® infusion must be started < 6 hours after the accident
18 years of age or older
Performance status (PS) < 2
Exclusion criteria
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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