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Dive into the research topics where Anthony A. Rayner is active.

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Featured researches published by Anthony A. Rayner.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1989

A randomized trial of continuous intravenous versus hepatic intraarterial floxuridine in patients with colorectal cancer metastatic to the liver: the Northern California Oncology Group trial.

David C. Hohn; Robert J. Stagg; Michael A. Friedman; J F Hannigan; Anthony A. Rayner; Robert J. Ignoffo; P Acord; Brian J. Lewis

In 1983, the Northern California Oncology Group (NCOG) instituted a randomized trial of intravenous (IV) versus intraarterial (IA) floxuridine (FUDR) administered via an implantable pump for patients with colorectal cancer metastatic to the liver. The study objectives were to compare the hepatic response rate, time to hepatic progression, and toxicity for the two treatment arms. The study design, which allowed patients failing IV FUDR to crossover to the IA arm, prevents a meaningful comparative analysis of survival. Patients with liver-only metastases (N = 143) were randomized, 76 to the IV arm and 67 to the IA arm, and 115 patients (65 IV, 50 IA) were fully evaluable. Of the 65 patients in the IV arm, 28 crossed over to IA treatment after failing IV FUDR. The dose-limiting toxicity of IV FUDR was diarrhea, whereas biliary toxicity limited both the dose and duration of IA FUDR therapy. Of the first 25 patients treated with IA FUDR at a dose of .3 mg/kg/day, 10 developed radiographically evident biliary strictures, and three developed permanent jaundice. With reduction of the initial IA FUDR dose to .2 mg/kg/day, and adoption of a policy of early dosage reduction, treatment interruption, or termination of therapy for persistent elevations in alkaline phosphatase, only two further cases of serious biliary toxicity occurred. However, 26 of the 50 IA FUDR patients ultimately had therapy terminated because of drug toxicity rather than disease progression. When compared with systemic infusion, infusion into the hepatic artery greatly enhanced the antitumor activity of FUDR against colorectal liver metastases. Although biliary toxicity is the most serious limitation of this form of therapy, biliary stricture and jaundice usually can be averted through careful monitoring of liver enzymes and early dosage reduction.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1989

Interleukin-2 and lymphokine-activated killer cell therapy of solid tumors: analysis of toxicity and management guidelines.

Kim Margolin; Anthony A. Rayner; Michael J. Hawkins; Michael B. Atkins; Janice P. Dutcher; R I Fisher; G R Weiss; James H. Doroshow; H S Jaffe; M Roper

The National Cancer Institute (NCI) Extramural IL2/LAK Working Group treated 93 patients with 114 cycles of high-dose intravenous (IV) interleukin-2 (IL-2) and lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells in three phase II trials. Thirty-six patients had metastatic melanoma, 35 had metastatic renal cell cancer, and 22 had colorectal cancer. All patients had a Karnofsky performance status greater than or equal to 80% and normal laboratory tests and organ function, and had received no more than one prior form of immunotherapy or chemotherapy. Objective responders were eligible to receive up to two additional courses of therapy at 12-week intervals. The most frequent toxicities were a capillary leak syndrome resulting in marked extravascular fluid shifts, and hypotension requiring treatment with large volumes of IV fluids and vasopressor agents. Laboratory and clinical evidence of hepatic and renal dysfunction were virtually universal. Intensive care-level support was routinely provided and the toxicity observations confirmed the need for this level of care. The life-threatening toxicities were cardiac and pulmonary. Five of the 27 patients who experienced significant respiratory compromise required intubation and mechanical ventilatory support. Twenty patients developed cardiac arrhythmias, the majority of which were supraventricular. There was a single episode of ventricular tachycardia requiring cardioversion. Four patients had transient cardiac ischemia, and an additional four had myocardial infarctions, one of which was fatal. With these exceptions, all toxicities were rapidly reversible. The occurrence of only a single therapy-related death and a very low incidence of other irreversible or life-threatening events is comparable to the level of toxicities often observed in other phase II trials. Although the intensity of this regimen limits this approach to a subset of cancer patients with excellent performance status and adequate organ function, because of the frequency and apparent durability of complete responses, this treatment warrants further investigation.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1988

Metastatic renal cancer treated with interleukin-2 and lymphokine-activated killer cells. A phase II clinical trial.

Richard I. Fisher; Charles A. Coltman; James H. Doroshow; Anthony A. Rayner; Michael J. Hawkins; Peter H. Wiernik; John D. McMannis; Geoffrey R. Weiss; Kim Margolin; Brett T. Gemlo; Daniel F. Hoth; David R. Parkinson; Elisabeth Paietta

STUDY OBJECTIVE To confirm the antitumor efficacy of treatment with interleukin-2 and lymphokine-activated killer cells in patients with metastatic renal cancer. DESIGN Nonrandomized, phase II clinical trial. SETTING Tertiary care units in university medical centers. PATIENTS Consecutive trial of 35 patients with metastatic or unresectable renal cell cancer who have bidimensionally measurable disease, performance status 0 or 1, and normal function of all vital organs. Thirty-two patients completed interleukin-2 priming and received at least one lymphokine-activated killer cell infusion. Three patients were removed from the study and did not receive infusion of cells secondary to rapid tumor progression or toxicity. INTERVENTIONS Patients initially received recombinant interleukin-2, 100,000 units/kg body weight every 8 hours, on days 1 to 5 in a priming phase to stimulate lymphokine-activated killer cell precursors and effector activity in vivo. Leukapheresis was done on days 8 to 12 and lymphocytes were cultured in vitro with interleukin-2 for 3 to 4 days to amplify lymphokine-activated killer cell activity. Finally, interleukin-2, 100,000 units/kg every 8 hours, was infused with cultured cells on days 12 to 16. All doses of interleukin-2 and lymphokine-activated killer cells were administered in intensive care units. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS The mean number of doses of interleukin-2 administered during the priming phase was 12.9 +/- 0.4; the mean number of lymphokine-activated killer cells reinfused was 7.0 +/- 0.6 X 10(10); and the mean number of interleukin-2 doses administered during the last phase was 10.2 +/- 0.6. The overall objective response rate was 16%; two patients had complete responses and three patients had partial responses with greater than 50% reduction of all measurable tumor. The complete responders remain disease-free at 12 and 9 months. Two partial responders have not had tumor regrowth at 16 and 15 months. The third partial responder relapsed at 4 months. Toxicity was severe but generally of short duration and manageable. There were no treatment-related deaths. Hypotension, weight gain, anemia, and elevations of serum creatinine levels and liver enzymes were common. Two patients required intubation; one patient had a myocardial infarction. CONCLUSIONS This phase II study confirms the antitumor activity of interleukin-2 and lymphokine-activated killer cell therapy in patients with metastatic or unresectable renal cell cancer. Response rates, especially complete remission rates, are comparable or better than rates achieved with other forms of therapy.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1990

Interleukin-2 therapy in patients with metastatic malignant melanoma: a phase II study.

David R. Parkinson; Judith Abrams; Wiernik Ph; Anthony A. Rayner; K A Margolin; D A Van Echo; Mario Sznol; Janice P. Dutcher; Frederick R. Aronson; James H. Doroshow

Forty-seven patients with metastatic malignant melanoma were treated with two 5-day cycles of 100,000 U/kg recombinant interleukin-2 (IL-2) intravenously (IV) every 4 hours separated by 1 week. This dose and schedule of IL-2 were identical to those used in a previous combined IL-2 and lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell phase II clinical trial of the IL-2/LAK Working Group. Patient eligibility criteria, and clinical management guidelines were similar to those used in the previous trial. Forty-six patients were assessable for response. Objective responses were observed in 10 of 46 patients (two complete responses [CRs], eight partial responses [PRs]) or 22% with responses occurring in lung and liver as well as lymph nodes and subcutaneous sites. The median response duration was 8 months. Toxicity was significant; three patients developed myocardial infarction, and one patient died during therapy. Overall the toxicity and response rate for single-agent IL-2 are similar to that observed with IL-2 administered in combination with LAK cells in the previous trial. These results suggest that single-agent therapy with IL-2 when administered in this schedule has significant antimelanoma activity in humans, and that LAK cells generated from peripheral blood add little to the antimelanoma activity of this dose and schedule of IL-2.


Cancer | 1986

Toxicities and complications of implanted pump hepatic arterial and intravenous floxuridine infusion

David Hohn; Anthony A. Rayner; James S. Economou; Robert J. Ignoffo; Brian J. Lewis; Robert J. Stagg

Toxicities and complications were prospectively analyzed in patients with liver metastases receiving hepatic intra‐arterial (IA) and systemic intravenous (IV) floxuridine (FUDR) with the Infusaid (Intermedics‐Infusaid Corp., Norwood, MA) implantable pump. Among 55 patients treated with IA FUDR (0.3–0.1 mg/kg/day × 14, every 28 days), elevations in liver enzyme values, not attributable to disease progression, developed in 96% of patients. Serious biliary toxicity occurred in 31 patients (56%). In 16, biliary sclerosis was documented radiographically and was diagnosed clinically in 15 additional patients. Ten patients were hospitalized for biliary toxicity, including five who required cholecystectomy for acalculous cholecystitis. Because of the high reported incidence of serious gastroduodenal toxicity after IA FUDR infusion, our procedure for hepatic arterial cannulation was designed to eliminate misperfusion of the stomach and duodenum with drug; none of our patients experienced FUDR‐associated gastroduodenal ulceration or bleeding. Cyclic IV FUDR (0.05–0.15 mg/kg/day × 14, every 28 days) was administered to 31 participants of the Northern California Oncology Group trial (3L‐82‐1) of IV versus IA FUDR. Dose‐limiting toxicity was diarrhea. Serious toxicities were: protracted diarrhea (three), dermatitis (two), tear duct stenosis (two), and stomatitis (two). Three patients were hospitalized for toxicity. No hematologic or biliary toxicity occurred. The optimal route for treatment of hepatic metastases with continuous FUDR infusion has not yet been established. Systemic IV infusion has low morbidity, but preliminary response data need to be substantiated in controlled clinical trials before there can be widespread clinical application. High response rates for IA infusion have been previously documented. Morbidity due to acalculous cholecystitis and gastroduodenal ulceration can now be avoided. Despite significant progress in characterization of hepatobiliary toxicity, it remains dose‐limiting. Continuous IA FUDR infusion should remain under the aegis of dedicated treatment centers until standardized protocols with diminished toxicity are established.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1987

In vivo and in vitro activation of natural killer cells in advanced cancer patients undergoing combined recombinant interleukin-2 and LAK cell therapy.

Joseph H. Phillips; Brett T. Gemlo; Warren W. Myers; Anthony A. Rayner; Lewis L. Lanier

Patients with advanced metastatic cancer were given combined autologous lymphokine activated killer (LAK) cell and recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) therapy on a National Cancer Institute extramural phase II trial. Systemic administration of rIL-2 resulted in pronounced lymphocytopenia. Within two days after completion of in vivo rIL-2 therapy, there was a dramatic increase in absolute numbers of circulating lymphocytes, and cytotoxic activity against tumor cell targets was mediated by peripheral blood lymphocytes, indicating in vivo generation of LAK activity. Patients were leukapheresed and cells cultured for three to four days in rIL-2. rIL-2 cultured cells from all patients demonstrated cytotoxic activity. In order to characterize the effector cell, T cells and natural killer (NK) cells were isolated to greater than 95% purity by flow cytometry. Cytotoxic activity was mediated by rIL-2--activated NK cells, whereas T cells demonstrated no substantial activity. The circulating in vivo cytotoxic effectors detected after in vivo rIL-2 therapy were also shown to be rIL-2--activated NK cells. Results from these studies demonstrate that all patients were capable of generating a cytotoxic response, and that the cytotoxic effector cells were rIL-2--activated NK cells, identified by the phenotype CD3--, Leu 19+.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1990

Therapy of renal cell carcinoma with interleukin-2 and lymphokine-activated killer cells: phase II experience with a hybrid bolus and continuous infusion interleukin-2 regimen.

D R Parkinson; R I Fisher; Anthony A. Rayner; Elisabeth Paietta; K A Margolin; G R Weiss; Mario Sznol; Ellen R. Gaynor; M H Bar

Forty-seven patients with metastatic or unresectable renal cell carcinoma were treated with interleukin-2 (IL-2) and lymphokine-activated killer (LAK)-cell therapy, using a hybrid IL-2 regimen. IL-2 was administered initially by intravenous bolus (10(5) U/kg [Cetus Corp, Emeryville, CA] every 8 hours for 3 days) during the priming phase, and subsequently by continuous infusion (3 x 10(6) U/m2 for 6 days); during this second treatment period, in vitro-generated LAK cells were administered. Despite selection of patients for good performance status (PS) (29, PS 0; 18, PS 1) prior nephrectomy (43 of the 47 patients), and low tumor burden, the response rate was low (two complete [CRs] and two partial responses [PRs], for an overall objective response rate of 9%). Toxicity was comparable to that experienced with the high-dose bolus regimen. These results suggest that the dose and schedule of IL-2 administration may influence the likelihood of response to IL-2 in renal cell carcinoma.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1990

Metastatic malignant melanoma treated with combined bolus and continuous infusion interleukin-2 and lymphokine-activated killer cells.

M H Bar; M Sznol; M B Atkins; N Ciobanu; K C Micetich; D H Boldt; K A Margolin; Frederick R. Aronson; Anthony A. Rayner; M J Hawkins

Fifty patients with advanced melanoma received high-dose bolus and continuous infusion interleukin-2 (IL-2) with lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells in an attempt to improve the therapeutic index of this active but toxic therapy. Treatment began with up to nine bolus doses of IL-2 administered over 3 days. After 1 day of rest, patients underwent daily leukapheresis for 4 days, and the leukocytes were cultured with IL-2 in vitro to prepare LAK cells. Continuous infusion IL-2 was begun 1 day after the last leukapheresis and continued for up to 148 hours; LAK cells were administered on days 1, 2, and 4 of the infusion. Responding patients were eligible to receive up to two additional cycles of therapy at 3-month intervals. Most patients completed each cycle without dose reduction. One patient had a complete response and six patients had partial responses (14% response rate). The complete responder and three of the partial responders (8%) remain free from disease progression with follow-up of 21 to 24 months. Of these four patients with durable remissions, one had extensive liver and lymph node metastases, one had lymph node, pleural, and parenchymal lung metastases, and two had disease limited to lymph nodes or subcutaneous tissues. Seventeen patients (34%) required pressors for hypotension, three patients (6%) developed hemodynamically significant arrhythmias, and six patients (12%) developed dyspnea at rest, but none required intubation and there were no treatment-related deaths. Unacceptable toxicity developed in two patients during bolus IL-2 administration and therapy was aborted; both returned to baseline status within 4 days of discontinuing IL-2. Fever, oliguria, and elevated creatinine or transaminase levels occurred frequently but were also transient. Despite less frequent severe toxicity with this modified regimen, these results confirm the ability of IL-2 and LAK cell therapy to induce durable remissions in some patients with advanced melanoma.


American Journal of Surgery | 1986

Home support of patients with end-stage malignant bowel obstruction using hydration and venting gastrostomy

Brett T. Gemlo; Anthony A. Rayner; Brian D. Lewis; Alvin Wong; Carol S. Viele; John R. Ungaretti; Alfred deLorimier; David C. Hohn

Palliative terminal care of patients with malignant bowel obstruction is a major clinical and ethical challenge. These patients are often mentally alert and ambulatory, but are kept in the hospital for hydration, nasogastric suction, and pain control. Parenteral nutrition requires frequent metabolic monitoring, is expensive, and is ethically questionable. We have used an alternative method of home management for 27 patients who met the following criteria: inoperable bowel obstruction due to untreatable cancer, an estimated life expectancy of between 2 weeks and 3 months, and understanding of the goals and limits of therapy. Hydration was provided by 10 percent dextrose and electrolyte solutions administered as overnight infusions through long-term central venous catheters. Thirteen patients with complete bowel obstruction required a venting gastrostomy which, when connected to passive drainage, relieved nausea and vomiting. The mean duration of survival was 64 days (range 9 to 223 days). Acceptance by patients and families was excellent, although most acknowledged increased costs due to limited insurance coverage for outpatient care. Seven patients returned to the hospital for terminal care (average stay 3.2 days), and 20 chose to die at home. The mean daily expense for fluids and supplies was +73.50, with an overall cost decrease of


Journal of Immunotherapy | 1994

A phase II clinical trial of interleukin-2 and lymphokine-activated killer cells in advanced colorectal carcinoma

Michael J. Hawkins; Michael B. Atkins; Janice P. Dutcher; Richard I. Fisher; Geoffrey R. Weiss; Kim Margolin; Anthony A. Rayner; Mario Sznol; David R. Parkinson; Elizabeth Paietta; Ellen R. Gaynor; David H. Boldt; James H. Doroshow; Frederick R. Aronson

900,000 compared with inpatient care. Home support with fluids and gastric venting is a humane, cost-effective alternative to in-hospital care for selected patients.

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Brett T. Gemlo

Loyola University Chicago

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Michael B. Atkins

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Michael J. Hawkins

National Institutes of Health

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David C. Hohn

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Geoffrey R. Weiss

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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James H. Doroshow

National Institutes of Health

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Janice P. Dutcher

National Foundation for Cancer Research

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Kim Margolin

City of Hope National Medical Center

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