Journal of Clinical Oncology, Vol 9, 1476-1479, Copyright © 1991 by American Society of Clinical Oncology
Objective antitumor activity of acivicin in patients with recurrent CNS malignancies: a Southwest Oncology Group trial
SA Taylor, J Crowley, TW Pollock, HJ Eyre, C Jaeckle, HE Hynes and RL Stephens
University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City.
Acivicin (AT-125) is a glutamine antagonist with dose-limiting,
schedule-dependent CNS toxicity and predictable CSF penetration after
intravenous administration. Because of these properties, a trial in CNS
malignancies was initiated. Thirty-two patients with recurrent or residual
malignant astrocytomas were treated with AT-125. The majority of patients
had glioblastoma multiforme (24) and had received prior nitrosoureas (21).
The median age was 50 years, and Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG)
performance status was 2. The major determinant of response was based upon
radiologic criteria using computed tomographic (CT) scanning and/or
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. The tumor mass was measured in two
perpendicular planes, which yielded the largest cross-sectional area.
Standard solid tumor criteria for response were used. All responding
patients also had a stable or tapered dose of corticosteroids with stable
or improved performance status and neurologic examination. There were four
objective responses (12%): one complete remission (3 1/2+ years) and three
partial remissions (57, 86, and 322 days). Two patients had improvement in
disease that did not meet requirements for a partial remission. Toxicity
was mild and primarily consisted of nausea, vomiting, and lethargy. Two
patients were removed from study due to neurotoxicity (depression and
hallucinations). The strict response criteria used in this trial were not
those that have been used in testing other active agents such as carmustine
(BCNU). We conclude that AT-125 has objective antitumor activity in
malignant astrocytomas and warrants further study.