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Relationships between carboplatin exposure and tumor response and toxicity in patients with ovarian cancer
- Source :
- Journal of Clinical Oncology. 10:520-528
- Publication Year :
- 1992
- Publisher :
- American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), 1992.
-
Abstract
- PURPOSE The study was undertaken to define the relationship between tumor response and carboplatin area under the curve (AUC) in patients with ovarian cancer; to study the relationship between carboplatin AUC and myelosuppression in the same population; to establish the true impact of carboplatin AUC, prior therapy, and pretreatment platelet and WBC counts on toxicity; and to define an optimal carboplatin exposure for treating patients with ovarian cancer. METHODS With the equation AUC = dose/(glomerular filtration rate [GFR]+25), carboplatin AUC (course 1) was calculated for 1,028 patients (450 previously untreated) who received single-agent carboplatin (40 to 1,000 mg/m2) for advanced ovarian cancer. GFR was measured (chromium-51-edathamil [51Cr-EDTA] or creatinine clearance) in all patients. RESULTS Regression analysis showed that carboplatin AUC, prior treatment, and Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group grade performance status (PS) are predictors of tumor response, thrombocytopenia, and leukopenia. Pretreatment platelet and WBC counts are additional predictors of thrombocytopenia and leukopenia, respectively. Although the likelihood of tumor response increased with increasing carboplatin AUC, this relationship was nonlinear. In all patient subsets, the likelihood of complete response (CR) or overall response did not increase significantly above a carboplatin AUC of 5 to 7 mg/mL x minutes. At any given carboplatin AUC, thrombocytopenia occurred more frequently than leukopenia, although both approached 100% as carboplatin AUC increased. Both thrombocytopenia and leukopenia were more frequent in pretreated than in untreated patients regardless of pretreatment count. At any carboplatin AUC, the influence of PS on likelihood of response and toxicity was profound. CONCLUSION Carboplatin dosing by AUC will lead to more predictable toxicity, and increasing carboplatin AUC above 5 to 7 mg/mL x minutes does not improve the likelihood of response but does increase myelotoxicity. Therefore, careful evaluation of high-dose carboplatin therapy in a prospective, randomized trial is needed before such treatment becomes accepted practice.
- Subjects :
- Cancer Research
Pathology
medicine.medical_specialty
endocrine system diseases
medicine.medical_treatment
Population
Urology
Renal function
Carboplatin
chemistry.chemical_compound
medicine
Humans
education
Aged
Ovarian Neoplasms
Chemotherapy
education.field_of_study
Leukopenia
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
Performance status
business.industry
Area under the curve
Middle Aged
medicine.disease
Thrombocytopenia
female genital diseases and pregnancy complications
Oncology
chemistry
Multivariate Analysis
Regression Analysis
Female
medicine.symptom
Ovarian cancer
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15277755 and 0732183X
- Volume :
- 10
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Clinical Oncology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c451ae402a0f5f2a818c3286684f89ae
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1200/jco.1992.10.4.520