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A novel metronomic chemotherapy regimen of weekly platinum and daily oral etoposide in high-risk non-small cell lung cancer patients
Author(s) -
Pierpaolo Correale,
Daniela Cerretani,
Cinzia Remondo,
Ignazio Martellucci,
Stefania Marsili,
Marco La Placa,
Angela Sciandivasci,
Loretta Paolelli,
A. Pascucci,
Maria Teresa Rossi,
M. Di Bisceglie,
Gianluca Giorgi,
Giuseppe Gotti,
Guido Francini
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
oncology reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.094
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 1791-2431
pISSN - 1021-335X
DOI - 10.3892/or.16.1.133
Subject(s) - medicine , regimen , etoposide , leukopenia , adverse effect , gastroenterology , neutropenia , chemotherapy , progressive disease , phases of clinical research , anemia , surgery , oncology
The aim of this pilot phase II trial was to investigate the toxicity and anti-tumour activity of a novel metronomic regimen of weekly cisplatin (CDDP) and oral etoposide (VP16) in high-risk patients with advanced NSCLC. The study enrolled 31 high-risk patients (27 men and 4 women aged 16-82 years; mean, 64.3) with NSCLC (18 stage IIIB and 13 stage IV) and an ECOG performance status of < or = 3, all of whom received weekly CDDP 30 mg/m2 iv on days 1, 8, 14 and 28 of each cycle and oral daily etoposide 50 mg/m2 on 21 of the 28 days. The most frequent adverse events were grade III leukopenia and anemia; nevertheless, three patients died of pulmonary embolism after 2, 3 and 6 weeks of treatment. The objective response (OR) rate was 45.2% (2 complete and 12 partial), and the disease control rate was 58.1% (14 ORs and 4 disease stabilisations). The mean time to progression and survival were respectively nine months (95% CI, 6.3-15.8 months) and thirteen months (95% CI, 9.1-20.5 months). Pharmacological analysis showed that this metronomic regimen allows a much greater median monthly area under the curve of CDDP and VP16 than conventional treatment schedules. Our findings also suggest that this treatment schedule may affect tumour growth and neoangiogenesis by changing peripheral blood vascular-endothelial growth factor levels. These preliminary results indicate that our metronomic regimen is well tolerated and active, even in patients with a very poor prognosis.

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