| Literature DB >> 2982509 |
I E Smith, B D Evans, S J Harland, B A Robinson, J R Yarnold, J G Glees, H T Ford.
Abstract
Within an original consecutive series of 94 patients, 36 eligible patients with small cell lung carcinoma were treated with high-dose cyclophosphamide 7 g/m2 after conventional chemotherapy with VP16, adriamycin, and vincristine. The first 17 also underwent autologous bone marrow rescue. Treatment was well tolerated apart from one treatment-related death. Measurable tumour was still present in 15 patients before high-dose cyclophosphamide, and although 12 (80%) of these achieved further tumour response, these responses were all short-lived, with a median duration of 9 weeks. In 14 limited-disease patients already in complete remission before high-dose therapy the initial result was better, but 11 (79%) have now relapsed following overall median response duration of 10 months. High-dose cyclophosphamide after conventional chemotherapy is feasible and achieves a high response rate, but it does not appear to be associated with significant survival benefit either overall or in patient subgroup.Entities:
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Year: 1985 PMID: 2982509 DOI: 10.1007/bf00434349
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Chemother Pharmacol ISSN: 0344-5704 Impact factor: 3.333