Phase I and clinical pharmacology study of intravenous flavone acetic acid (NSC 347512)

Cancer Res. 1988 Oct 15;48(20):5878-82.

Abstract

We have conducted a Phase I and pharmacological study of flavone acetic acid, one of a series of novel flavonoids. The drug was administered i.v. weekly for 4 weeks, with a 2-week rest and then repeated. Flavone acetic acid was given initially in a 1-h infusion, but at the 3900-mg/m2 dose level, the infusion time was lengthened to 3 h. A total of 31 patients were treated with 9 different dose levels, ranging from 330 to 6400 mg/m2. Dose-limiting toxicity was acute hypotension that began after about one-third of each drug dose had been infused and rarely lasted more than a few minutes after the infusion was discontinued. In addition, subjective fatigue and asthenia causing unacceptable patient discomfort was dose limiting. A significant side effect noted that was not dose limiting was diarrhea during the infusion. This drug exhibited nonlinear pharmacokinetic behavior. Plasma levels exceeded 300 micrograms/ml during the infusion at the maximally tolerated dose. After the infusion ended the principal half-life was about 2 h. In 24-h urine collections 27% of the flavone acetic acid dose was recovered as intact drug and an additional 37% was recovered as a metabolite. The maximally tolerated dose determined in this study is 6400 mg/m2 given i.v. over 3 h.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Blood Pressure / drug effects
  • Drug Evaluation
  • Female
  • Flavonoids / adverse effects
  • Flavonoids / pharmacokinetics
  • Flavonoids / therapeutic use*
  • Humans
  • Injections, Intravenous
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Neoplasms / drug therapy*
  • Neoplasms / pathology

Substances

  • Flavonoids
  • flavone acetic acid