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Dive into the research topics where Raymond B. Weiss is active.

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Featured researches published by Raymond B. Weiss.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1990

Hypersensitivity reactions from taxol.

Raymond B. Weiss; Ross C. Donehower; Wiernik Ph; T Ohnuma; R J Gralla; D L Trump; J R Baker; D A Van Echo; D. D. Von Hoff; B Leyland-Jones

Taxol is an antitumor agent in clinical trial that has been shown to have activity against advanced ovarian carcinoma and melanoma. Hypersensitivity reactions (HSRs) have been one of the toxicities observed with administration of this drug. Of 301 patients treated, 32 patients have had definite (27 patients) or possible (five patients) hypersensitivity reactions to taxol. All but one patient had the reaction from the first or second exposure to this agent. Reactions occurred at a variety of doses and were characterized most frequently by dyspnea, hypotension, bronchospasm, urticaria, and erythematous rashes. Thirteen (41%) patients had received premedication designed to prevent such toxicity; nevertheless, they sustained HSRs. Prolonging the drug infusion appears to have somewhat reduced, but not obviated, the risk of HSRs. The cause (taxol itself or its excipient Cremophor EL; Badische Anilin und Soda-Fabrik AG [BASF], Ludwigshafen, Federal Republic of Germany) and the mechanism of these reactions to taxol are unknown. We provide guidelines to prevent or minimize such toxicity and treat reactions if they still occur.


Drugs | 1993

New cisplatin analogues in development : a review

Raymond B. Weiss; Michaele C. Christian

SummaryCisplatin was discovered to have cytotoxic properties in the 1960s, and by the end of the 1970s it had earned a place as the key ingredient in the systemic treatment of germ cell cancers. Since the early seminal work in the preclinical and clinical development of this drug, several thousand analogues have been synthesised and tested for properties that would enhance the therapeutic index of cisplatin. About 13 of these analogues have been evaluated in clinical trials, but only one (carboplatin) has provided definite advantage over cisplatin and achieved worldwide approval. However, carboplatin has afforded benefit only in reducing some cisplatin toxicities; it has not enlarged the spectrum of platinum-sensitive cancers, nor has it proved active in cisplatin-resistant cancers.The major obstacle to the efficacy of cisplatin or carboplatin is platinum resistance, either innate or acquired. The mechanisms of this resistance have been under intense study, and many of the cisplatin analogues synthesised in the past decade have been designed specifically with the hope of overcoming platinum resistance. The mechanism of the cytotoxic activity of platinum complexes has also been studied intensely. Recently synthesised analogues have been designed to interact with DNA in a manner different from cisplatin and carboplatin, with the desire of finding new structures with a superior or wider spectrum of antitumour efficacy. Most recently, water soluble platinum complexes that retain antitumour activity, but that can be effectively absorbed after oral administration, have been synthesised with the goal of improving patient quality of life.Nine platinum analogues are currently in clinical trials around the world (ormaplatin [tetraplatin], oxaliplatin, DWA2114R, enloplatin, lobaplatin, CI-973 [NK-121], 254-S, JM-216 and liposome-entrapped cis-bis-neodecanoato-trans-R,R-1,2-diaminocyclohexane platinum (II) [L-NDDP]). Some of these analogues only represent attempts to reduce cisplatin toxicity and/or allow administration without forced hydration and diuresis, which carboplatin already does. Others are ‘third generation’ complexes shown to have limited or no cross-resistance with cisplatin in preclinical studies. They are being tested clinically with particular attention to this highly desirable property. Some of these complexes will undoubtedly disappear into oblivion as have most of their predecessors. It is hoped that the 1990s will see the development (and worldwide registration) of another platinum complex that represents a step forward in cancer therapy, perhaps one active in cisplatin-refractory cancers and/or capable of being administered orally.


Cancer | 2003

Long-term adjustment of survivors of early-stage breast carcinoma, 20 years after adjuvant chemotherapy†

Alice B. Kornblith; James E. Herndon; Raymond B. Weiss; Chunfeng Zhang; Enid Zuckerman; Sylvia Rosenberg; Magriet Mertz; David K. Payne; Mary Jane Massie; James F. Holland; Patti Wingate; Larry Norton; Jimmie C. Holland

The long‐term impact of breast carcinoma and its treatment was assessed in 153 breast carcinoma survivors previously treated on a Phase III randomized trial (Cancer and Leukemia Group B [CALGB 7581]) a median of 20 years after entry to CALGB 7581.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1997

Extramedullary leukemia adversely affects hematologic complete remission rate and overall survival in patients with t(8;21)(q22;q22): results from Cancer and Leukemia Group B 8461.

John C. Byrd; Raymond B. Weiss; Diane C. Arthur; David Lawrence; Maria R. Baer; Frederick R. Davey; E S Trikha; Andrew J. Carroll; Ramana Tantravahi; Mazin B. Qumsiyeh; Shivanand R. Patil; Joseph O. Moore; Robert J. Mayer; Charles A. Schiffer; Clara D. Bloomfield

PURPOSE To examine the prognostic significance of extramedullary leukemia (EML) at presentation in patients with t(8;21)(q22;q22) karyotype. PATIENTS AND METHODS Consecutive patients with t(8;21) treated on Cancer and Leukemia Group B de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML) treatment studies were examined for the presence of EML (granulocytic sarcoma, subcutaneous nodules, leukemia cutis, or meningeal leukemia) at initial presentation. Clinical features and outcome of t(8;21) patients with and without EML were compared. RESULTS Of 84 patients with t(8;21), eight (9.5%) had EML manifesting as granulocytic sarcoma (five paraspinal, one breast, and one subcutaneous) or symptomatic meningeal leukemia (n = 1). The pretreatment prognostic variables of t(8;21) patients with and without EML were similar. The hematologic complete remission (CR) rate for t(8;21) patients with EML was 50% versus 92% for those without EML (P=.006). The median CR duration for EML patients was 14.7 months. Patients with EML had a shorter survival (P = 0.002, median 5.4 months versus 59.5 months). This poor outcome may relate to inadequate local (radiation or intrathecal) therapy for patients with spinal or meningeal EML, resulting in residual/recurrent EML following induction chemotherapy (n = 2) or at relapse (n = 1) and permanent neurologic deficits (n = 4). Only one of the EML patients received high-dose cytarabine (HDAC) intensification; this is the only EML patient remaining alive in CR. CONCLUSION Patients with t(8;21) and EML have a low CR rate and overall survival. An aggressive local and systemic induction therapy should be considered for this patient subset. The effectiveness of HDAC intensification in t(8;21) patients with EML is uncertain and warrants further study.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1980

Cytotoxic drug-induced pulmonary disease: Update 1980

Raymond B. Weiss; Franco M. Muggia

Administration of a number of cytotoxic agents has been associated with interstitial pneumonitis, alveolitis and pulmonary fibrosis. Some (bleomycin, busulfan, methotrexate) are well known to cause this problem, and others (carmustine, semustine, zinostatin, mitomycin, and chlorambucil) have only recently been recognized to do so. We review and update the available information about this form of drug toxicity. Interaction between these drugs and thoracic radiation or high oxygen fractions in inspired air has produced pneumonitis at doses lower than when the drug is used alone. Synergism between the drugs themselves when given concurrently also produces pulmonary toxicity at lower doses. With some drugs and in some patients steroids will diminish the pulmonary abnormalities, but death from hypoxia is a frequent outcome. Since early recognition of the problem and withdrawal of the injurious agent is the best treatment, physician awareness of and alertness to this toxicity and its relative risk is most important. The discovery of analogs of bleomycin with a better therapeutic index, specifically reducing pulmonary damage, is one of the goals of current cancer drug development.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1996

Relationship between toxicity and obesity in women receiving adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer: results from cancer and leukemia group B study 8541.

Gary L. Rosner; Jeffrey B. Hargis; Donna Hollis; Daniel R. Budman; Raymond B. Weiss; I C Henderson; Richard L. Schilsky

PURPOSE We examined data from a large clinical trial to determine if chemotherapy dosing according to actual body weight places obese patients at greater risk of toxicity. PATIENTS AND METHODS Cancer and Leukemia Group B (CALGB) study 8541, a randomized study of schedule and dose of adjuvant cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and fluorouracil (CAF) for stage II breast cancer patients with positive regional lymph nodes, provided data on 1,435 women for analysis. Using body-mass index (BMI), we classified a woman as obese if her BMI was > or = 27.3 kg/m2; doses were considered weight-based if within 5% of values calculated using actual weight. Our primary analysis concerned toxicity risks during cycle 1. RESULTS Among women who received weight-based doses of the most dose-intensive CAF regimen, 47% of obese and 51% of nonobese women experienced severe hematologic toxicity (grade > or = 3) during cycle 1 (P = .51, two-tailed). The overall risk ratio (obese v nonobese) of treatment failure among women who received weight-based doses during cycle 1 was 1.02 (95% confidence interval, 0.83 to 1.26), stratified by treatment and adjusted for number of positive nodes, menopausal status, hormone receptor status, and tumor size. The overall adjusted failure risk ratio (weight-based v reduced initial doses) was 0.73 (95% confidence interval, 0.53 to 1.00) among obese women. CONCLUSION Obese patients initially dosed (within 5%) by actual weight did not experience excess cycle 1 toxicity or worse outcome compared with nonobese women dosed similarly. The data suggest that obese women who received reduced doses in cycle 1 experienced worse failure-free survival. We recommend that initial doses of CAF be computed according to actual body weight.


Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology | 1986

Anthracycline analogs The past, present, and future

Raymond B. Weiss; Gisele Sarosy; Kathleen Clagett-Carr; Marianne Russo; Brian Leyland-Jones

Doxorubicin (Adriamycin, Adria Laboratories) has the widest spectrum of antitumor activity of all chemotherapeutic agents and is used with a high degree of efficacy in many human cancers. It is probably the most utilized antitumor drug worldwide, and a majority of patients needing systemic treatment for cancer receive doxorubicin (DOX) at some time during their clinical course. The major obstacle to its use is its cumulative dose-limiting cardiotoxicity. Great effort has been expended to discover means of ameliorating, preventing, or at least delaying the onset of this cardiotoxicity. One method has been to create DOX analogs that cause less cardiotoxicity. Concomitant with this search for less cardiotoxic analogs is a search for analogs that may be administered orally or that have greater antitumor efficacy, especially for human cancers such as melanoma and colon carcinoma that are insensitive to DOX. In the last decade a number of anthracycline analogs have been synthesized or isolated. One of these agents (epirubicin) has been developed to the point where it is commercially available in Europe and Canada. Others are undergoing clinical trials. Developments in this field of anthracycline analogs are rapid and sometimes confusing. Many new analogs have been placed in clinical trial and others have been dropped because of inferiority in various respects. We review in depth four of these analogs (epirubicin, esorubicin, idarubicin, and menogaril) that are of current high interest and then review in a briefer fashion analogs in disuse and those with promise for the future.


Cancer Treatment Reviews | 1995

Angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia (Castleman's disease)

Matthew J. McCarty; Svetislava J. Vukelja; Peter M. Banks; Raymond B. Weiss

This review provides a comprehensive assessment of angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia (ALNH) or Castlemans disease including pathogenesis, clinical presentation, histomorphologic and immunophenotypic findings, laboratory results, treatment, and prognosis. A division of ALNH into clinically relevant subtypes provides a framework for the consideration of the disorder. A comprehensive search of the medical literature involving ALNH using Medline was performed. Reports judged to be significant for the understanding of the disorder were analyzed and their findings incorporated into this review. ALNH is divided into localized/unicentric ALNH and generalized/multicentric ALNH due to the profound clinical differences seen between these variants. Localized/unicentric ALNH is separated by clinical and histomorphologic criteria into hyaline-vascular (HV) and plasma-cell (PC) subtypes. Generalized/multicentric ALNH may be divided by clinical criteria into generalized/multicentric ALNH without neuropathy (non-neuropathic) and generalized/multicentric ALNH with neuropathy (POEMS-associated or neuropathic). The dichotomy between these two subtypes is not absolute, with considerable clinical overlap occurring among patients presenting with generalized disease. Immunophenotypic and molecular probe studies demonstrate clonal B-cell lymphocyte populations in some cases, particularly those with generalized/multicentric ALNH. However, the finding of clonal populations is of no value in predicting malignant clinical progression. We conclude that using this division of ALNH, patients presenting with symptoms and histomorphology consistent with ALNH can be subdivided into the appropriate category of ALNH. Localized or unicentric disease, either HV or PC subtype, has an excellent prognosis with surgery being curative in the majority of cases. Generalized or multicentric disease indicates a poor prognosis with short survival, with the neuropathic variant possessing resistance to steroids and chemotherapy and a corresponding worse prognosis.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1998

Hemolytic anemia after fludarabine therapy for chronic lymphocytic leukemia.

Raymond B. Weiss; J. Freiman; S.L. Kweder; Louis F. Diehl; John C. Byrd

PURPOSE A report of the clinical features, treatment, and outcome of patients who developed hemolytic anemia (HA) temporally associated with fludarabine (Fludara; Berlex Laboratories, Richmond, CA) therapy for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). PATIENTS AND METHODS Data on 24 patients who developed HA related to fludarabine therapy were collected from the Spontaneous Reporting System of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Walter Reed Army Medical Center (Washington, DC). RESULTS Seventeen (71%) patients developed HA after either the first, second, or third cycle of this drug. The longest duration of fludarabine therapy before HA occurred was six cycles. The median decline in hematocrit from baseline during the hemolytic episode was 14.1 (range, 8.0 to 28.9) for the 18 patients for whom this information was available. For the 11 patients for whom transfusion requirements were known, the number of transfusions administered ranged between three and 36. Seven (29%) patients died of medical complications associated with the HA. Seven of eight patients who were re-challenged with fludarabine after an episode of HA developed recurrent HA, and three of these patients died. CONCLUSION HA associated with fludarabine therapy appears to be uncommon, but it can be severe and fatal, especially if a patient is re-treated with this drug after a previous episode of HA. The mechanism of this toxicity is unknown, but it may be caused by the release of a suppressed auto-antibody to a native red cell antigen.


The Journal of Urology | 1991

Staging Relationships and Outcome in Early Stage Testicular Cancer: A Report From the Testicular Cancer Intergroup Study

David G. McLeod; Raymond B. Weiss; Donald M. Stablein; Franco M. Muggia; David F. Paulson; James H. Ellis; Joseph T. Spaulding; John P. Donohue

The Testicular Cancer Center Intergroup Study entered surgically staged patients with nonseminomatous tumor and metastases limited to the regional lymph nodes into a previously reported cooperative trial of immediate versus delayed therapy for positive retroperitoneal node disease. Patients with negative nodes (stage I) were placed in an observation registry with specified treatment strategy upon relapse. Of 264 stage I cancer patients 27 (10.2%) had recurrence: 5 of these 27 patients died after recurrence of the testicular malignancies, while 4 other nontumor-related deaths have occurred. Pre-lymphadenectomy staging characteristics observed to predict significantly node positivity are the results of radiological examinations, presence of tumor invasion, vascular invasion and tumor histology. In a multiple logistic regression analysis with these variables, misclassification still occurs in more than a fourth of the patients. Future refinements in diagnosis may allow for better prediction of these patients at risk to have positive lymph nodes and ultimately recurrence. Presently, if assessment of nodal involvement is the objective, noninvasive procedures are not an adequate substitute for surgical staging with modified lymphadenectomy.

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James F. Holland

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Larry Norton

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Charles A. Schiffer

University of Maryland Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Cancer Center

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Marjorie Perloff

National Institutes of Health

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William D. James

University of Pennsylvania

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