Thirty-four dogs with histopathologically confirmed, measurable, nonresectable transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder were treated with piroxicam (0.3 mg/kg PO sid) and were evaluated for tumor response and drug toxicity. Dogs were evaluated at the Purdue University Veterinary leaching Hospital by means of physical examination, thoracic and abdominal radiography, cystography, complete blood count, serum biochemistry profile, and urinalysis. In selected cases, prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) concentrations in plasma and in supernatants of stimulated monocytes, and natural killer cell activity were quantified. Dogs were evaluated before therapy and at 28 and 56 days after initiation of therapy. Dogs with stable disease or remission at 56 days remained on the study and were evaluated at 1 to 2 month intervals. Tumor responses were 2 complete remissions, 4 partial remissions, 18 stable disiroxicam (Feldene) is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory P drug primarily used to treat arthritis in humans.' It has also been reported to have antitumor activity in chemically inducal2-' and transplanted* tumors in rodents and in metastatic tumors in people.' We previously reported a phase I clinical trial of piroxicam in 62 dogs with naturally occurring tumors and identified dose-related gastrointestinal toxicity and subclinical renal toxicity.'o Antitumor activity was observed in this phase 1 trial in dogs with transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the urinary bladder." To hrther investigate the antitumor activity of piroxicam, we conducted a phase I1 clinical trial in 25 dogs with TCC of the bladder. The study reported here includes 9 dogs from the phase I trial and 25 dogs from the phase I1 trial. Although the purpose of a phase I trial is to evaluate drug doses and toxicity, useful information on tumor response and survival was available in the dogs with TCC in the phase I trial we conducted." Therefore, these dogs were included in this report. Materials and Methods Clinical Trial DesignEntry requirements for this study included the presence of measurable (by cystography), histopathologically confirmed TCC of the urinary bladder, performance status consistent with expected minimum survival of6 weeks, and informed consent by the owner. Dogs that had previously received chemotherapy had evidence of tumor progression on that therapy, and a minimum of 3 weeks was required between the last chemotherapy and entry into this trial.Dogs were evaluated at the Purdue University Veterinary Teaching Hospital on days 0, 28, and 56. These evaluations included physical examination, complete blood count, serum biochemistry profile, urinalysis, thoracic radiography, and cystography (pneumocystography or double contrast cystography). Care was taken to perform the cystography in the same manner (same radiographic technique, same amount of contrast material) for each evaluation of a patient. Piroxicam was administered orally at a dose of 0.3 mg/kg sid. This dose was established based on a previous phase I clinical trial." When secondary bacteria...
Osteogenic protein-1 (OP-1) is a member of the transforming growth factor beta superfamily and is a potent modulator of osteogenesis and bone cell differentiation. This preclinical study in dogs sought to assess the effects of OP-1 on periodontal wound healing in surgically created critical size Class III furcation defects. Eighteen male beagle dogs were subjected to the creation of bilateral mandibular 5 mm osseous defects. A split-mouth design was utilized which randomly assigned opposing quadrants to control therapy (surgery alone or collagen vehicle) or 1 of 3 ascending concentrations of OP-1 in a collagen vehicle (0.75 mg OP-1/g collagen, 2.5 mg/g, or 7.5 mg/g). Thus, 9 quadrants per test group received OP-1, 9 quadrants per control group received surgery alone, and 9 quadrants received collagen vehicle alone. Test articles were delivered by a surgeon masked to the treatment, and fluorogenic bone labels were injected at specified intervals post-treatment. Eight weeks after defect creation and OP-1 delivery, tissue blocks of the mandibulae were taken for masked histomorphometric analysis to assess parameters of periodontal regeneration (e.g., bone height, bone area, new attachment formation, and percent of defect filled with new bone). Histomorphometry revealed limited evidence of osteogenesis, cementogenesis, and new attachment formation in either vehicle or surgery-alone sites. In contrast, sites treated with all 3 concentrations of OP-1 showed pronounced stimulation of osteogenesis, regenerative cementum, and new attachment formation. Lesions treated with 7.5 mg/g of OP-1 in collagen regenerated 3.9+/-1.7 mm and 6.1+/-3.4 mm2 (mean +/-S.D.) of linear bone height and bone area, respectively. Furthermore, these differences were statistically different from both control therapies for all wound healing parameters (P < 0.0001). No significant increase in tooth root ankylosis was found among the treatment groups when compared to the surgery-alone group. We conclude that OP-1 offers promise as an attractive candidate for treating severe periodontal lesions.
Piroxicam, a nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug, was given to 62 dogs bearing naturally occurring tumors in a phase I clinical trial. Dose escalation was performed, with oral doses ranging from 0.5 mg/kg every 48 h (q48h) to 1.5 mg/kg q48h being tested. Dose-limiting gastrointestinal irritation/ulceration occurred in all four animals that received 1.5 mg/kg q48h. The maximum tolerated dose was 1 mg/kg q48h. Subclinical renal papillary necrosis occurred in two dogs (initial dosages, 1 and 1.5 mg/kg q48h, respectively). Following dose escalation, an additional group of dogs was treated with 0.3 mg/kg piroxicam q24h per os, the accepted canine dosage prior to this trial. Inclusion of this treatment group enabled evaluation of the toxicity of and tumor response to a daily dosage regimen. No complete remissions occurred in this trial. Partial remission was documented in three of ten dogs exhibiting transitional-cell carcinoma, in three of five animals bearing squamous-cell carcinoma, in one of three dogs displaying mammary adenocarcinoma, and in the one dog that exhibited a transmissible venereal tumor. The results of this study support the additional evaluation of piroxicam in a phase II clinical trial in dogs bearing naturally occurring tumors.
SUMMARY A reliable method of producing physical stress in the rat was developed using heat irradiation, and the possible interaction between chronic ethanol consumption and stress was investigated in a rat model of alcoholism. Chronic heat stress and chronic ethanol consumption each produced mild hypertension in rats. When combined, the two treatments resulted in hypertension more severe than that produced by either stress or ethanol consumption alone. The group of animals receiving both treatments also exhibited high mortality. Investigations into the mechanisms responsible for the apparent additive effects of the two treatments revealed that the animals in this group had the highest circulating norepinephrine levels. The plasma volumes, however, were not different between the stressed groups and their unstressed counterparts. As the plasma norepinephrine level usually reflects overall sympathetic tone of an animal, our results suggest that the additional hypertensive effect of chronic stress on the ethanol-treated animals is associated with increased sympathetic nervous activity and is not a result of expanded plasma volume. These findings may have clinical implications for human alcoholics and in the analysis of cardiovascular risk factors in hypertensive patients. (Hypertension 7: 519-524, 1985) KEY WORDS • ethanol • heat stress • rodent model • blood pressure • mortality sympathetic activity • catecholamines P HYSICIANS have long suspected that chronic alcoholism is associated with hypertension.
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