Renal function during rofecoxib therapy in patients with metastatic cancer: Retrospective analysis of a prospective phase II trial

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Abstract

Background. Angiostatic/antiinflammatory therapy with COX-II inhibitors and pioglitazone seems to be a well tolerated and promising regimen in patients with metastatic cancer. COX-II inhibitors may have less gastrointestinal side effects than conventional non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs, but their impact on renal function seems to be similar. Methods. 87 patients with metastatic/advanced cancer were treated up to 12 months (mean 19.5 weeks) with rofecoxib, pioglitazone and either capecitabine (group A with gastrointestinal and urological cancer, n = 50) or trofosfamide (group B with non-gastrointestinal/non-urological cancer, n = 37) and followed for further 6 months. Results. Baseline serum creatinine concentration was 0.81 ± 0.28 mg/dl, and increased by about 0.15 mg/dl during months 1-3. Accordingly estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) decreased from 90.3 ml/min ± 3.6 ml/min at baseline by about 10 ml/min during months 1-3. Renal function decreased in 75 patients (86%) in the first month (p < 0.0001). This decrease went along with clinical signs of volume expansion. Renal function tended to recover after discontinuation of the study medication. Conclusions. Therapy with rofecoxib in an antiangiogenic/antiinflammatory setting results in a decrease of renal function in nearly every patient. Trial registration number. German Clinical Trials Register DRKS: DRKS00000119. © 2011 Reinhold et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Reinhold, S. W., Reichle, A., Leiminger, S., Bergler, T., Hoffmann, U., Krüger, B., … Krämer, B. K. (2011). Renal function during rofecoxib therapy in patients with metastatic cancer: Retrospective analysis of a prospective phase II trial. BMC Research Notes, 4. https://doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-4-2

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