| Literature DB >> 22295202 |
Diana V Golub1, A Cahid Civelek, Vivek R Sharma.
Abstract
The typically recommended chemotherapy options in metastatic anal cancer generally yield partial remissions with limited benefit for the majority of patients. TIP is a regimen containing paclitaxel (Taxol), ifosfamide, and cisplatin that is known to have significant activity in patients with squamous cell cancers of the head and neck as well as in cervical cancer, both of which are malignancies strongly associated with oncogenic strains of human papilloma virus (HPV). Interestingly, squamous cell cancer of the anal canal shares an almost identical pathophysiology including causal association with HPV. Due to this, we chose to use the TIP regimen to treat patients with advanced anal cancer at our institution and report our findings on three such consecutive patients. All the patients tolerated the regimen well with manageable side effects and had excellent responses with complete resolution of PET activity after treatment. Our observations suggest that TIP is highly active for squamous cell cancer of the anal canal and warrants further study in the treatment of this disease.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22295202 PMCID: PMC3265251 DOI: 10.1155/2011/163736
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemother Res Pract ISSN: 2090-2107
Figure 1(a) The pretherapy anterior (0° degree) maximum intensity projection image of the PET/CT study of patient 1 showing multiple metastatic lesions in bilateral supraclavicular fossa, throughout the mediastinum, hila and in abdominal nodal basins. (b) The six-months posttherapy anterior (0° degree) maximum intensity projection image of the PET/CT study of the patient showing complete resolution of the previously seen FDG avid lesions.
Figure 2(a) The pretherapy anterior (0° degree) maximum intensity projection image of the PET/CT study of the patient demonstrating multiple pleural-based nodular metastatic lesions in the left chest along with prominent FDG uptake also seen in the activated brown fat tissue in multiple locations. (b) The six-months posttherapy anterior (0° degree) maximum intensity projection image of the PET/CT study of the patient showing complete resolution of the previously seen FDG avid lesions associated with intense bone marrow FDG activity and increased splenic activity seen due to therapy-induced bone marrow stimulation.
Summary of patient characteristics and treatment outcomes with TIP.
| Patient | Stage at original diagnosis | Treatment at original diagnosis | Presentation at recurrence | Treatment at recurrence | Toxicity besides alopecia with TIP: all were NCI grade 1 or 2 unless otherwise specified | Best response to TIP by RECIST criteria | Duration of response with TIP | Survival since recurrence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case 1-46-year-old female | T3N3M0 | CRT with 5FU/cisplatin | Biopsy-proven metastatic disease in chest and abdomen twelve months after original diagnosis | TIPx6 cycles then TIPx2 cycles then FOLFOX6 modified x1 cycle | Anemia Thrombocytopenia PN (grade 3) | CR per CT after 3 cycles confirmed by PET/CT after 3 more cycles | 6 months | 14 months |
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| Case 2-42-year-old female | T3N3M0 | CRT with 5FU/cisplatin | Biopsy-proven metastatic disease in chest twenty two months after original diagnosis | TIPx6 cycles | Anemia Thrombocytopenia | CR per PET/CT after 3 cycles | 2 years and six months | 2 years and six months thus far |
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| Case 3-54-year-old female | T4N2M0 | CRT with 5FU/cisplatin | Metastatic disease in pelvis five months after original diagnosis | TIPx7 cycles then RT to right paraspinal mass | Anemia Thrombocytopenia Nausea | CR per PET after 4 cycles (PR per CT) | 4 months | 17 months thus far (patient alive with disease) |
CRT: chemo radio therapy
5FU: fluorouracil
CR: complete remission
PR: partial remission
RECIST: response evaluation criteria in solid tumors
FOLFOX: infusional fluorouracil + leucovorin + oxaliplatin.
PN: Peripheral neuropathy.
Figure 3(a) The pretherapy anterior (0° degree) maximum intensity projection image of the PET/CT study of the patient is shown with the red arrows indicating the right internal iliac and left common iliac lesions. (b) The four-months posttherapy anterior (0° degree) maximum intensity projection image of the PET/CT study shows resolution of previously seen FDG avid bilateral iliac lesions while the arrow indicates the FDG activity at left antecubital fossa injection site.