Mitomycin-C in breast cancer.

Mitomycin-C, an antitumor antibiotic discovered in 1958, acts as a bifunctional alkylating agent. Initial clinical trials utilized a daily schedule of administration, which led to severe and protracted myelosuppression and inadequate evaluation of the antitumor spectrum of mitomycin-C. In the early 1970s, the intermittent high-dosage schedule of administration was developed: 20 mg/m2 of mitomycin-C intravenously, every 6 to 8 weeks. An overall response rate of 35% was reported by several investigators. Subsequently, other administration schedules were attempted without improvement in therapeutic index. More recently, mitomycin-C was used in combinations with other drugs. Combinations of mitomycin-C and one of the vinca alkaloids have produced response rates of approximately 30% to 40% in patients with extensive previous treatment. In patients not previously exposed to doxorubicin, combinations of mitomycin-C and doxorubicin have offered response rates of approximately 50%. Acute toxicities of mitomycin-C are tolerable and consist of mild nausea, vomiting, and anorexia. Chronic toxicities include cumulative myelosuppression--especially thrombocytopenia--pulmonary toxicity, renal toxicity, and occasionally cardiac toxicity. Mitomycin-C is an effective antitumor agent in breast cancer and should be carefully incorporated in the therapeutic strategy of this disease.

[1]  B. Issell,et al.  Mitomycin: ten years after approval for marketing. , 1985, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[2]  S. Luikart,et al.  Adriamycin (doxorubicin), vinblastine, and mitomycin C combination chemotherapy in refractory breast carcinoma , 1984, Cancer.

[3]  A. Howell,et al.  Dibromodulcitol, mitomycin C and vinblastine (DMV) chemotherapy in advanced breast cancer. , 1984, European journal of cancer & clinical oncology.

[4]  P. Schein,et al.  Treatment of advanced breast cancer with two doxorubicin‐containing regimens , 1984, American journal of clinical oncology.

[5]  M. Shah,et al.  An effective low‐dose mitomycin regimen for hormonal‐ and chemotherapy‐refractory patients with metastatic breast cancer , 1983, Cancer.

[6]  A. Bedikian,et al.  A phase I-II study of continuous 5-day infusion mitomycin-C. , 1983, American journal of clinical oncology.

[7]  J. Lokich,et al.  Mitomycin C: Phase I study of a constant infusion ambulatory treatment schedule , 1982, American journal of clinical oncology.

[8]  D. Crivellari,et al.  Third-line chemotherapy with mitomycin, vinblastine, and carmustine (BCNU) in refractory breast carcinoma: a pilot study. , 1982, Cancer treatment reports.

[9]  G. Bjelkengren,et al.  A phase II study of combined 5‐fluorouracil and mitomycin C in advanced breast cancer , 1982, Cancer.

[10]  D. V. Van Echo,et al.  Mitomycin C and vinblastine chemotherapy for advanced breast cancer , 1981, Cancer.

[11]  C. Brambilla,et al.  Mitomycin C in Metastatic Breast Cancer Resistant to Hormone Therapy and Conventional Chemotherapy , 1980, Tumori.

[12]  G. Hortobagyi,et al.  Pulmonary toxicity of mitomycin , 1980, Cancer.

[13]  G. Hortobagyi,et al.  Phase II study of hexamethylmelamine alone and in combination with mitomycin C and vincristine in advanced breast carcinoma. , 1979, Cancer treatment reports.

[14]  C. Vogel,et al.  Phase II study of mitomycin C and vinblastine in women with advanced breast cancer refractory to standard cytotoxic therapy. , 1978, Cancer treatment reports.

[15]  G. Hortobagyi,et al.  Adriamycin and mitomycin C: possible synergistic cardiotoxicity. , 1978, Cancer treatment reports.

[16]  S. Crooke,et al.  Mitomycin C. , 1976, IARC monographs on the evaluation of the carcinogenic risk of chemicals to man.

[17]  L. Manheimer,et al.  Mitomycin‐C in the therapy of far‐advanced malignant tumors , 1966, Cancer.

[18]  G. Blumenschein,et al.  Phase I-II study of high-dose mitomycin with autologous bone marrow transplantation in refractory metastatic breast cancer. , 1984, Cancer treatment reports.

[19]  C. Perno,et al.  Mitomycin C in patients with metastatic breast cancer refractory to hormone therapy and chemotherapy. , 1983, Oncology.

[20]  G. Blumenschein,et al.  Doxorubicin, mitolactol (dibromodulcitol), and mitomycin C treatment for patients with metastatic breast cancer previously treated with cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, 5-FU, vincristine, and prednisone (CMFVP). , 1981, Cancer treatment reports.

[21]  V. Vaitkevicius,et al.  Phase II study of profiromycin vs mitomycin-C utilizing acute intermittent schedules. , 1976, Medical and pediatric oncology.

[22]  T. Godfrey,et al.  Mitomycin C in large infrequent doses in breast cancer. , 1976, Medical and pediatric oncology.

[23]  J. Bateman,et al.  Phase I-II evaluation of weekly mitomycin-C (NSC-26980) for patients with metastatic GI and breast malignancies. , 1974, Oncology.