Literature DB >> 11911307

Chemotherapy with vinorelbine, cisplatin and continuous infusion of 5-fluorouracil in locally advanced breast cancer: a promising low-toxic regimen.

L Orlando1, M Colleoni, G Curigliano, F Nolè, G Ferretti, G Masci, G Peruzzotti, I Minchella, M Intra, P Veronesi, G Viale, A Goldhirsch.   

Abstract

Primary chemotherapy for locally advanced breast cancer, usually an anthracycline-containing regimen, improves local disease control allowing for an initially inoperable tumour to be resected. The feasibility and efficacy of a regimen containing vinorelbine (V), cisplatin (P) and 5-fluorouracil (5-Fu) as continuous infusion (ViFuP regimen) for patients with locally advanced breast cancer were evaluated. Twenty-six patients with a T4 breast cancer presentation (eight also had synchronous distant metastases) were treated with V (20 mg total dose i.v. on day 1 and day 3), P (60 mg/m2 i.v. on day 1) and 5-Fu (200 mg/m2/d as continuous infusion) all given every 3 weeks for a maximum of 6 courses. Eleven patients had an inflammatory breast lesion, 4 had a T4a and 11 a T4b presentation. Among those with metastases, 6 had one site and 2 had two sites of disease. After chemotherapy all tumors except one became operable. Objective response was observed in 19 out of the 26 evaluable patients (73%; 95% CI: 52-88%): fourteen had a partial response (54%); 5 had a clinically complete response (19%) and 5 had complete pathological response (20%; 95% CI: 7-41%). Seven patients had stable disease (27%) while no disease progression under treatment occurred. Mild or moderate side-effects included neutropenia (G1-G2 in 58% and G3 in 31% of patients), anemia (G1 in 19%), nausea and/or vomiting (G1-G2 in 92% of patients), mucositis (G1-G2 in 23%), diarrhea (G1 in 19%), plantar-palmar erythema (G1 in 12%) and alopecia G1 in 27% of patients. We conclude that the ViFuP regimen is well-tolerated and its use results in a high response rate. Thus ViFuP may be considered a relevant alternative to more toxic regimens, with an acceptable response rate. Despite the lack of a formal demonstration of equal efficacy with more toxic regimens commonly applied in locally advanced breast cancer, testing new modalities or drugs might provide a more fruitful strategy for relevant therapeutic progress.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11911307

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anticancer Res        ISSN: 0250-7005            Impact factor:   2.480


  2 in total

1.  Weekly cisplatin, epirubicin, and paclitaxel with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor support vs triweekly epirubicin and paclitaxel in locally advanced breast cancer: final analysis of a sicog phase III study.

Authors:  G Frasci; G D'Aiuto; P Comella; R Thomas; G Botti; M Di Bonito; V De Rosa; G Iodice; M R Rubulotta; G Comella
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2006-10-23       Impact factor: 7.640

2.  Retrospective analysis of 119 Chinese noninflammatory locally advanced breast cancer cases treated with intravenous combination of vinorelbine and epirubicin as a neoadjuvant chemotherapy: a median follow-up of 63.4 months.

Authors:  Ou Huang; Canming Chen; Jiayi Wu; Shujie Chen; Xiaosong Chen; Guangyu Liu; Zhen Hu; Jingsong Lu; Jiong Wu; Zhimin Shao; Zhenzhou Shen; Kunwei Shen
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2009-10-21       Impact factor: 4.430

  2 in total

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