Published in:
01-12-2013 | Original Article
Evaluation of safety parameters and changes in serum concentration in liver transplant recipients treated with doxorubicin during the anhepatic period
Authors:
Shogo Kobayashi, Hiroshi Wada, Naoki Hama, Hirofumi Akita, Koichi Kawamoto, Hidetoshi Eguchi, Koji Umeshita, Yuichiro Doki, Masaki Mori, Hiroaki Nagano
Published in:
Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology
|
Issue 6/2013
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Abstract
Purpose
Because of the recurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) at the graft after liver transplantation, circulating HCC cells may be present during the anhepatic period. Intravenous doxorubicin (DOX) is used during the anhepatic period to combat these cells; however, pharmacokinetics data have been poorly analyzed. This study aims to investigate DOX administration during the anhepatic period.
Patients and methods
We administered 5 mg/m2 DOX immediately after liver removal and compared serum DOX concentrations at several intervals during the anhepatic period in patients who underwent liver transplantation because of liver cirrhosis and HCC (n = 3) and patients who underwent liver resection owing to HCC with portal vein tumor thrombi (n = 5). We also measured serum DOX concentrations and pharmacokinetic parameters in transplant patients that received 3–15 mg/m2 DOX (n = 3 per dose level). We evaluated transplant patients’ adverse drug reactions and survival.
Results
At 10 and 30 min after DOX administration, serum DOX concentrations were elevated two- to threefold in transplant patients versus resection patients. Dose escalation in transplant patients exhibited a prolonged T
1/2 in the one-compartment model and T
1/2
β in the two-compartment model, as well as a dose-dependent elevation of the area under the curve. No obvious adverse drug reactions were noted at 3–15 mg/m2 DOX. In transplant patients, 5-year recurrence-free survival was 68.8 %; overall survival was 100.0 %.
Conclusion
During the anhepatic period, serum DOX concentrations were elevated two- to threefold, T
1/2 was prolonged dose dependently, and up to 15 mg/m2 DOX could be safely administered.