Antileukemic and immunosuppressive activity of 2-chloro-2'-deoxyadenosine.

Abstract
The adenosine deaminase-resistant purine deoxynucleoside 2-chloro-2''-deoxyadenosine (CdA) is markedly toxic in vitro to nondividing and proliferating normal human lymphocytes and to many leukemia cell specimens. The CdA is also effective against mouse L1210 leukemia in vivo. The pharmacology, chemotherapeutic activity and toxicity of CdA was studied in 9 patients with advanced hematologic malignancies refractory to conventional therapy. When administered by continuous i.v. infusion, the deoxyadenosine analog was well tolerated. As monitored by radioimmunoassay, plasma CdA levels rose gradually during the infusions. The CdA was not deaminated significantly. In all patients with leukemia, the CdA lowered the blast count by at least 50%. In 1 patient with a T cell leukemia-lymphoma, and in another patient with chronic myelogenous leukemia in blast crisis, the CdA infusion eliminated all detectable blasts from the blood and bone marrow. In a patient with a diffuse lymphoma complicated by severe autoimmune hemolytic anemia, CdA treatment quickly terminated the hemolytic process. Bone marrow suppression represented the dose-limiting toxicity and was related to plasma CdA levels, cumulative drug dosage and the rapid release of CdA that accompanied tumor cell lysis.