학술논문

High rate of extra-haematological toxicity compromises dose-dense sequential adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
British Journal of Cancer. 11/8/2011, Vol. 105 Issue 10, p1480-1486. 7p. 1 Color Photograph, 1 Diagram, 3 Charts.
Subject
*HEMATOLOGICAL manifestations of general diseases
*RANDOMIZED controlled trials
*ANTHRACYCLINES
*FLUOROURACIL
*GRANULOCYTE-colony stimulating factor
BREAST cancer chemotherapy
Language
ISSN
0007-0920
Abstract
Background: A dose-dense strategy has been considered to improve results of adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer. This randomised phase II trial investigated the feasibility of this approach with sequential anthracyclines and taxanes-based chemotherapy.Methods: Patients with high-risk node-positive breast cancer were treated with three cycles of fluorouracil 500 mg m(-2), epirubicin 100 mg m(-2), cyclophosphamide 500 mg m(-2) (FEC 100) followed by three cycles of docetaxel 100 mg m(-2) delivered at 2-weekly intervals supported by primary prophylaxis with filgrastim. All patients were randomised to either uninterrupted treatment (arm A) or to have a 2-week additional period of rest between the FEC and docetaxel (arm B). The primary endpoint was the rate of success of chemotherapy delivery. Using a two-stage Fleming design, 120 patients were required with one interim analysis.Results: In March 2005, enrolment was stopped into arm A after the observation of severe skin toxicities. Following the planned interim analysis, the study was closed because of the high rate of grade 3/4 skin toxicities in both arms (arm A: 32.4% and arm B: 18.9%).Conclusion: Sequential dose-dense FEC 100 followed by docetaxel 100 mg m(-2) is not feasible. Feasibility still depends largely on several factors including the choice of drugs, dosage and sequence of administration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]