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Docetaxel combined with irinotecan or 5-fluorouracil in patients with advanced oesophago-gastric cancer: a randomised phase II study

Authors :
Joseph Kerger
F. Lofts
Halfdan Sorbye
Patrick Schöffski
O. Rixe
D K Hossfeld
J Aparicio
Robert E. Hawkins
A Schalhorn
J.-L. Misset
David Cunningham
J Cassinello
Lionel D'Hondt
M Mousseau
Marianne Nicolson
J-L Canon
C Garcia Giron
E Fonseca
Amitesh Roy
R Rodriguez
C Castanon
J-R Barcelo
Antoine Adenis
Gail K. Adler
Guillermo Lopez-Vivanco
Source :
British Journal of Cancer
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2012.

Abstract

Background: Docetaxel and irinotecan chemotherapy have shown good efficacy in the treatment of advanced oesophago-gastric cancer. This randomised phase II study evaluated the efficacy and toxicity profile of two non-platinum docetaxel-based doublet regimens in advanced oesophago-gastric cancer. Methods: Chemotherapy-naïve patients with advanced oesophago-gastric cancer were randomised to receive either 3-weekly DI (docetaxel 60 mg m−2 plus irinotecan 250 mg m−2 (Day 1)) or 3-weekly DF (docetaxel 85 mg m−2 (Day 1) followed by 5-fluorouracil 750 mg m−2 per day as a continuous infusion (Days 1–5)). Results: A total of 85 patients received DI (n=42) or DF (n=43). The primary endpoint was overall response rate (ORR). The ORR and time to progression (TTP) in the evaluable population (n=65) were 37.5% (DI) vs 33.3% (DF), and 4.2 months vs 4.4 months, respectively. In the intent-to-treat population, the observed ORR, TTP and median overall survival were similar between the two groups. Grade 3–4 neutropenia, febrile neutropenia and diarrhoea were more frequent in the DI arm as compared with the DF arm (83.3% vs 69.8%, 40.5% vs 18.6%, and 42.9% vs 16.3%, respectively). Conclusion: Both docetaxel-based doublet regimens show comparable efficacy; however, the DF regimen was associated with a better toxicity profile and is an alternative treatment option for patients in whom platinum-based regimens are unsuitable.

Details

ISSN :
15321827 and 00070920
Volume :
107
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....24f5c7a2626f74d00a463afab50061f6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2012.286