| Literature DB >> 12610501 |
J-C Lin1, J-S Jan, C-Y Hsu, R-S Jiang, W-Y Wang.
Abstract
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is a radiosensitive and chemosensitive tumour. The aim of this prospective study is to evaluate the toxicity and efficacy of an outpatient weekly neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NeoCT) plus radiotherapy for advanced NPC. From November 1998 to August 2001, 90 NPC patients meeting the following criteria were treated: (1) neck node >6 cm; (2) supraclavicular node metastasis; (3) skull base destruction/intracranial invasion plus multiple nodes metastasis; (4) multiple neck nodes metastasis with one of nodal size >4 cm; or (5) elevated serum LDH level. The NeoCT consists of cisplatin 60 mg m(-2), alternating with 5-fluorouracil 2500 mg m(-2) plus leucovorin 250 mg m(-2) (P-FL) by an outpatient weekly schedule for a total of 10 weeks. Local radiotherapy > or =70 Gy by conventional fractionation was delivered within 1 week after NeoCT. Patient compliance was rather good. Grade 3-4 toxicity of NeoCT included leucopaenia (7.8%), anaemia (18.9%), thrombocytopaenia (3.3%), nausea/vomiting (4.4%), and weight loss (1.1%). Response evaluated after NeoCT showed 73.3% complete response (CR) rate of primary tumour, 71.1% CR rate of neck nodes, and an overall CR rate of 57.8%. In all, 88 out of 90 patients received rebiopsy of primary tumour and 55 patients (62.5%) revealed pathological CR. After a median follow-up time of 24 months, one persistent disease and 18 relapses were noted. The 2-year nasopharynx disease-free, neck disease-free, distant disease-free, overall, and progression-free survival rates are 98.9, 95.9, 80.0, 92.1, and 77.5%, respectively. Preliminary data of the current study show that P-FL NeoCT plus radiotherapy is a low-toxic regimen with promising results on very advanced NPC patients and merits to be investigated in phase III trials.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12610501 PMCID: PMC2377053 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6600716
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Patient characteristics
| Age (years) | |||
| Range | 24–71 | ||
| Median | 43 | ||
| Mean | 45 | ||
| Sex | |||
| Male | 66 | 73.3 | |
| Female | 24 | 26.7 | |
| Karnofsky scale | |||
| ⩾80% | 82 | 91.1 | |
| <80% | 8 | 8.9 | |
| Pathology (WHO classification) | |||
| Type I | 4 | 4.4 | |
| Type II | 70 | 77.8 | |
| Type III | 16 | 17.8 | |
| T-stage (1997 AJCC) | |||
| T1 | 6 | 6.7 | |
| T2a | 2 | 2.2 | |
| T2b | 19 | 21.1 | |
| T3 | 12 | 13.3 | |
| T4 | 51 | 56.7 | |
| N-stage (1997 AJCC) | |||
| N2 | 56 | 62.2 | |
| N3 | 34 | 37.8 | |
| Concurrent chemotherapy | |||
| Yes | 11 | 12.2 | |
| No | 79 | 87.8 | |
| Adjuvant chemotherapy | |||
| Yes | 11 | 12.2 | |
| No | 79 | 87.8 |
Acute toxicities of neoadjuvant P–FL chemotherapy
| Leucopaenia | 21 (23.3%) | 30 (33.3%) | 32 (35.6%) | 7 (7.8%) | 0 |
| Anaemia | 15 (16.7%) | 34 (38.9%) | 24 (26.7%) | 14 (15.6%) | 3 (3.3%) |
| Thrombocytopaenia | 82 (91.1%) | 2 (2.2%) | 4 (4.4%) | 2 (2.2%) | 1 (1.1%) |
| Mucositis | 87 (96.7%) | 1 (1.1%) | 2 (2.2%) | 0 | 0 |
| Nausea/vomiting | 40 (44.4%) | 33 (36.7%) | 13 (14.4%) | 4 (4.4%) | 0 |
| Weight loss | 42 (46.7%) | 33 (36.7%) | 14 (15.6%) | 1 (1.1%) | 0 |
| Alopecia | 86 (95.6%) | 4 (4.4%) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Tumour response
| Clinical | |||
| CR | 66 (73.3%) | 64 (71.1%) | 52 (57.8%) |
| PR | 23 (25.6%) | 24 (26.7%) | 36 (40.0%) |
| SD | 1 (1.1%) | 2 (2.2%) | 2 (2.2%) |
| Pathological | |||
| CR | 55 (62.5%) | ||
| Residual tumour | 33 (37.5%) | ||
A total of 88 out of 90 patients received rebiopsy of nasopharynx after neoadjuvant chemotherapy before radiotherapy.
CR=complete response, PR=partial response, SD=stable disease.
Figure 1Pretreatment CT scan (A, B) showed a big nasopharyngeal tumour with intracranial invasion in a patient presenting as multiple cranial nerve palsy. The tumour regressed completely with bony regeneration of the destructed skull base after 10-week neoadjuvant chemotherapy (C, D).
Acute toxicities of subsequent radiotherapy
| Leucopaenia | 9 (10.0%) | 26 (28.9%) | 41 (45.6%) | 14 (15.6%) | 0 |
| Anaemia | 11 (12.2%) | 32 (35.6%) | 31 (34.4%) | 9 (10.0%) | 7 (7.8%) |
| Thrombocytopaenia | 85 (94.4%) | 0 | 3 (3.3%) | 1 (1.1%) | 1 (1.1%) |
| Mucositis | 0 | 19 (21.1%) | 24 (26.7%) | 47 (52.2%) | 0 |
| Skin reaction | 0 | 22 (24.4%) | 44 (48.9%) | 24 (26.7%) | 0 |
| Weight loss | 22 (24.4%) | 34 (37.8%) | 33 (36.7%) | 1 (1.1%) | 0 |
| Nausea/vomiting | 84 (93.3%) | 6 (6.7%) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Figure 2Overall and progression-free survival curves for all 90 patients.
Figure 3Comparison of overall survival (A) and progression-free survival (B) according to tumour response after neoadjuvant chemotherapy using the Kaplan–Meier estimate and the log-rank test. CR=complete response.
Literature review of phase III studies in NPC
| 1978 UICC | RT | 116 | 67 (4-year OS) | 83 | |
| Stage II–IV | RT+AdjCT | 113 | 59 | 70 | |
| 1988 AJCC/UICC | RT | 77 | 60.5 (5-year OS) | 80 | |
| Stage IV | RT+AdjCT | 77 | 54.5 | 78 | |
| 1988 AJCC/UICC | RT | 69 | 37 (5-year OS | 58 | |
| Stage III–IV | CCRT+AdjCT | 78 | 67 | 82 | |
| Ho's N2-3 or | RT | 176 | 69 (2-year RFS) | ||
| node⩾4 cm | CCRT | 174 | 76 | ||
| Ho's N3 or | RT | 40 | 81 (2-year OS) | 81 | |
| node ⩾4 cm | NeoCT+RT+AdjCT | 37 | 80 | 80 | |
| 1987 UICC | RT | 168 | 54 (3-year OS) | 60 | |
| N2-3 | NeoCT+RT | 171 | 60 | 65 | |
| Ho's T3, N2-3 | RT | 167 | 71 (3-year OS) | 81 | |
| or node ⩾3 cm | NeoCT+RT | 167 | 78 | 81 | |
| 1992 Chinese | RT | 228 | 56 (5-year OS) | 82 | |
| Stage III–IV | NeoCT+RT | 228 | 63 | 87 | |
| 1988 AJCC/UICC | RT | 40 | 48 (5-year OS) | 85 | |
| Stage I–IV | NeoCT+RT | 40 | 60 | 88 | |
| Current series | 1997 AJCC | NeoCT+RT | 90 | 92.1 (2-year OS) | 92.1 |
| Stage III–IV |
*P<0.05.
For comparison purposes, we estimated a 2-year overall survival rate from the reported survival curve.
RT=radiotherapy, AdjCT=adjuvant chemotherapy, CCRT=concomitant chemoradiotherapy, NeoCT=neoadjuvant chemotherapy, OS=overall survival, RFS=relapse-free survival.