| Literature DB >> 17876335 |
V Boige1, J-L Raoul, J-P Pignon, O Bouché, J-F Blanc, L Dahan, J-L Jouve, N Dupouy, M Ducreux.
Abstract
Evaluation of new drug combinations is needed to improve patients' prognosis in advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The purpose of this study was to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the capecitabine-oxaliplatine combination (XELOX) in HCC patients. First-line chemotherapy with XELOX regimen consisting of a 3-week cycle of intravenous oxaliplatin (130 mg m(-2)) on Day 1, and oral capecitabine twice daily from Days 1-14 (1000 mg m(-2)) was administered in patients with measurable, unresectable HCC. Fifty patients (male, 88%; median age, 68 years) received a total of 295 cycles (median, 6) of treatment. Disease control (three partial responses, 29 stable diseases) rate was 72% (95% CI 57-83%). Median overall and median progression-free (PFS) survival was 9.3 months and 4.1 months, respectively. Progression-free survival rates at 6 and 12 months were 38% (95% CI 26-52%) and 14% (95% CI 7-26%), respectively. Main grade 3-4 drug-related toxicities included diarrhoea (16%), elevation of aminotransferases and/or bilirubin (16%), thrombocytopenia (12%), and neurotoxicity (6%). Capecitabine plus oxaliplatin regimen showed modest anti-tumour activity with tolerable toxicities in patients with advanced HCC. However, the manageable toxicity profile and the encouraging disease control rate deserve further attention for this convenient, outpatient-based chemotherapy regimen.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17876335 PMCID: PMC2360397 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6603956
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Patients' baseline characteristics
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| Median age, years (range) | 68 (24–82) |
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| Male, | 44 (88) |
| Female, | 6 (12) |
| 0 | 22 (44) |
| 1 | 25 (50) |
| 2 | 3 (6) |
| 0 | 1 (2) |
| 1 | 18 (36) |
| 2 | 19 (38) |
| 3 | 12 (24) |
| A | 43 (86) |
| B | 7 (14) |
| Coexisting cirrhosis, | 36 (72) |
| Alcohol | 33 (66) |
| Hepatitis C | 5 (10) |
| Hepatitis B | 3 (6) |
| Hemochromatosis | 4 (8) |
| Other | 5 (10) |
| Median AFP | 159 (11–487 221) |
AFP=alphafetoprotein.
Alcohol abuse: alone in 28 patients (56%), with either haemochromatosis (two patients, 4%) or hepatitis B virus (two patients, 4%) or hepatitis C virus (one patient, 2%).
Normal liver in two patients (4%); not otherwise specified, unknown origin and degenerated adenomatosis in one patient (2%), each.
In the 40 patients with abnormal AFP level at baseline.
Figure 1Kaplan–Meier estimation of progression-free survival and overall survival (N=50).
Figure 2Kaplan–Meier estimation of overall survival by Child–Pugh score group (N=50).
Univariate and multivariate analyses of overall survival (N=50)
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| A | 43 | 49% (35–63%) |
| 1 |
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| B | 7 | 14% (3–51%) | 3.01 (1.25–7.26) | ||
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| 0 | 22 | 59% (39–77%) | 0.056 | 1 | 0.070 |
| 1–2 | 28 | 32% (18–51%) | 1.76 (0.95–3.26) | ||
OS=overall survival; CI, confidence interval; HR=hazard ratio; PS=performance status.
Log-rank test.
Cox model.
Bold values signifies <0.05.
Treatment-related toxicities in 49 patients
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| Thrombocytopenia | 17 (35%) | 6 (12%) |
| Transaminases or bilirubin | 31 (63%) | 8 (16%) |
| Diarrhoea | 18 (37%) | 8 (16%) |
| Anaemia | 31 (63%) | 6 (12%) |
| Neurotoxicity | 37 (76%) | 3 (6%) |
| Nausea/vomiting | 26 (53%) | 2 (4%) |
| Neutropenia | 14 (29%) | 2 (4%) |
| Hand foot syndrome | 17 (35%) | 2 (4%) |
| Mucocitis | 7 (14%) | 1 (2%) |
| Other | 29 (59%) | 6 (12%) |
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| Myocardial infarction in neutropenia | 1 (6%) | |
| Aplastic pneumopathy | 1 (6%) | |
At cycles 8, 9, and 11, respectively.
Four fatigue, one fatigue and lombalgia, one fatigue and anorexia, one fatigue and hypokalemia, one liver pain, one hypercreatininemia, one leucopenia, one constipation, and one diabetes decompensation.