| Literature DB >> 24649151 |
Keiichi Kontani1, Shin-Ichiro Hashimoto1, Chisa Murazawa1, Shoko Norimura2, Hiroaki Tanaka3, Masahiro Ohtani4, Naomi Fujiwara-Honjo5, Manabu Date6, Hitoshi Houchi3, Hiroyasu Yokomise1.
Abstract
The objective of treatment for metastatic breast cancer (MBC) is to control the disease or disease-related symptoms. Prolonged survival has also often been achieved by chemotherapeutic regimens in this setting. Long-term administration of one therapeutic regimen is essential for prolonging survival as well as for maintaining quality of life in these patients. In this study, we focused on time to treatment failure (TTF) as a parameter that predicts patient survival and we retrospectively compared clinical outcomes of patients with MBC who showed TTF of ≥12 months (26 patients) and <12 months (29 patients). The proportion of hormone receptor-positive tumors and the number of prior chemotherapy regimens for MBC were significantly higher and tumor grade was lower in patients with TTF ≥12 months compared to those with TTF <12 months. With regard to clinical outcomes, the objective response rate (ORR) in patients with TTF ≥12 months was significantly higher and median time to progression (TTP) and overall survival (OS) were longer compared to those with TTF <12 months. Of note, the proportion of patients who received metronomic regimens was significantly higher in patients with TTF ≥12 months compared to those with TTF <12 months (80.8 vs. 24.1%, P=0.00003). To assess the clinical benefit of metronomic regimens, the efficacy in patients receiving metronomic and those receiving non-metronomic regimens was compared. Although there was no difference in ORR between the two groups, median TTP and OS were significantly longer in the metronomic compared to the non-metronomic group (TTP: 30 vs. 4 months, P=0.0017; OS: 68 vs. 28 months, P=0.0005). The results suggested that metronomic chemotherapy is useful for palliative care and also improved clinical outcomes as a regimen for which long-term administration may be expected.Entities:
Keywords: metastatic breast cancer; metronomic chemotherapy; time to treatment failure
Year: 2012 PMID: 24649151 PMCID: PMC3956261 DOI: 10.3892/mco.2012.49
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Clin Oncol ISSN: 2049-9450