Literature DB >> 9578059

The use of dose-intensified chemotherapy in the treatment of metastatic nonseminomatous testicular germ cell tumors. German Testicular Cancer Study Group.

C Bokemeyer1, A Harstrick, J Beyer, B Metzner, U Rüther, J T Hartmann, K Holstein, H G Derigs, R de Wit, J Casper, P Schöffski, I Kührer, H J Illiger, B Kempf, A Reichle, A Föller, D K Hossfeld, J T Fischer, W E Berdel, H H Gerhartz, H Kirchner, K H Pflüger, H Ostermann, L Kanz, H J Schmoll.   

Abstract

With the use of a cisplatin-based chemotherapy, metastatic testicular cancer has become a model for a highly curable malignant disease. Current data show that 70% to 80% of patients with this disease will achieve long-term survival following cisplatin/etoposide/bleomycin therapy. The role of high-dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell support is being investigated in metastatic germ cell cancer in attempts to improve outcome for patients whose disease relapses after standard-dose chemotherapy and for those who present initially with advanced metastatic disease. Prognostic categories for patients receiving high-dose salvage chemotherapy have recently been developed: cisplatin-refractory disease, beta-human chorionic gonadotropin values greater than 1,000 U/L, and primary mediastinal germ cell tumors are factors characterizing patients who will derive less benefit from high-dose chemotherapy than those with chemosensitive disease at relapse. While standard-dose salvage chemotherapy achieves only a 20% long-term survival rate, high-dose salvage chemotherapy may yield a cure rate of approximately 40%. A randomized study comparing high-dose therapy with conventional-dose therapy (IT94 coordinated by the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation) in patients with relapsed disease is ongoing to substantiate this observation. The use of dose-intensive therapy as first-line treatment is currently being studied by several institutions. High-dose therapy may be better tolerated when used first line compared with its use in the salvage situation, and may also achieve a rapid initial cell kill before cytostatic drug resistance develops. The German Testicular Cancer Study Group has developed a sequential high-dose combination regimen of cisplatin/etoposide/ifosfamide given with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor and peripheral blood stem cell support for four cycles every 3 weeks. This ongoing study, started in 1990, had accrued 218 patients with advanced testicular germ cell tumors as of June 1997. Of 141 evaluable patients receiving dose levels 1 through 5, 82 (58%) have achieved complete remission with no evidence of disease and 32 (23%) have achieved partial remission with marker normalization. The early death rate was 8%. Overall and event-free survival rates at 2 years are 78% and 73%, respectively, with a projected 5-year overall survival rate of 74%. Despite favorable preliminary results, this approach cannot be considered standard treatment. Currently, high-dose chemotherapy with peripheral blood stem cell transplantation should be administered to patients with testicular cancer only within controlled clinical trials to allow long-term cure rates and treatment-related late side effects to be evaluated.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9578059

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Semin Oncol        ISSN: 0093-7754            Impact factor:   4.929


  8 in total

1.  Clinical experience with plerixafor as a mobilization regimen for autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation in patients with refractory germ cell tumors.

Authors:  Ignacio García-Escobar; Lucía Parrilla; Laura Montejano Ortega; Daniel Castellanos; María Ángeles Montalbán Pallarés; Hernán Cortés-Funés
Journal:  Mol Clin Oncol       Date:  2014-07-29

Review 2.  Diagnosis and treatment of patients with testicular germ cell cancer.

Authors:  J T Hartmann; L Kanz; C Bokemeyer
Journal:  Drugs       Date:  1999-08       Impact factor: 9.546

3.  The role of [(18)F] FDG-PET, CT/MRI and tumor marker kinetics in the evaluation of post chemotherapy residual masses in metastatic germ cell tumors--prospects for management.

Authors:  Anna C Pfannenberg; Karin Oechsle; Carsten Bokemeyer; Christian Kollmannsberger; Bernhard M Dohmen; Roland Bares; Jörg T Hartmann; Reinhard Vonthein; Claus D Claussen
Journal:  World J Urol       Date:  2004-01-21       Impact factor: 4.226

Review 4.  Proximal renal tubular acidosis: a not so rare disorder of multiple etiologies.

Authors:  Syed K Haque; Gema Ariceta; Daniel Batlle
Journal:  Nephrol Dial Transplant       Date:  2012-12       Impact factor: 5.992

5.  Treatment-induced anaemia and its potential clinical impact in patients receiving sequential high dose chemotherapy for metastatic testicular cancer.

Authors:  C Bokemeyer; K Oechsle; J T Hartmann; P Schöffski; N Schleucher; B Metzner; J Schleicher; L Kanz
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2002-11-04       Impact factor: 7.640

6.  Bleomycin, vincristine, cisplatin/bleomycin, etoposide, cisplatin chemotherapy: an alternating, dose intense regimen producing promising results in untreated patients with intermediate or poor prognosis malignant germ-cell tumours.

Authors:  D A Anthoney; M J McKean; J T Roberts; A W Hutcheon; J Graham; W Jones; J Paul; S B Kaye
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2004-02-09       Impact factor: 7.640

7.  First-line sequential high-dose VIP chemotherapy with autologous transplantation for patients with primary mediastinal nonseminomatous germ cell tumours: a prospective trial.

Authors:  C Bokemeyer; N Schleucher; B Metzner; M Thomas; O Rick; H-J Schmoll; C Kollmannsberger; I Boehlke; L Kanz; J T Hartmann
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2003-07-07       Impact factor: 7.640

Review 8.  The role of high-dose chemotherapy in the treatment of testicular cancer.

Authors:  Alexandra Karadimou; Meletios A Dimopoulos; Aristotle Bamias
Journal:  Open Access J Urol       Date:  2010-02-10
  8 in total

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