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1.
Purpose In this multicenter phase II study the efficacy and safety of the alternating schedule of irinotecan (CPT-11) with bolus 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and leucovorin (LV) were assessed as first-line chemotherapy in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC).Patients and methods Enrolled in the study were 43 patients with advanced CRC. They received CPT-11 350 mg/m2 i.v. on day 1, alternating with LV 20 mg/m2 i.v. and 5-FU 425 mg/m2 i.v. daily for five consecutive days, on days 22–26 (Mayo Clinic regimen). One cycle consisted of 6 weeks.Results A total of 179 cycles were administered with a median of four per patient (range one to nine). Efficacy was analyzed on an intention-to-treat basis. The overall objective response rate was 30% (95% CI 16–44), with four complete responses and nine partial responses, whereas 20 patients (4%) showed stable disease. The median time to disease progression was 9.0 months and median survival was 18.5 months. Grade 3/4 diarrhea was mainly related to CPT-11 rather than to 5-FU (9.3% vs 4.7% of patients), whereas grade 3/4 neutropenia was higher during 5-FU administration (16.3% vs 7.0% of patients).Conclusions The alternating schedule of CPT-11 with 5 days bolus of 5-FU and low-dose LV showed a clinical benefit in terms of tumor growth control as first-line treatment of patients with metastatic CRC. The overall safety data confirmed this alternating combination as a well-tolerated treatment.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract

This study is a retrospective analysis of response, toxicity and freedom from progression of two single-agent chemotherapy regimens in patients with previously treated metastatic colorectal cancer. Thirty-five patients with histological-ly confirmed measurable metastatic colorectal cancer received chemotherapy after failure of first-line 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and leucovorin treatment. The median age was 61 years. Twenty-seven patients had liver metastases, 6 had local recurrence, 1 had retroperitoneal lymph node metastases and 1 had lung metastases. Eighteen patients received weekly 2600 mg/m2 5-FU and 17 patients received weekly 125 mg/m2 irinotecan (CPT-11). Treatment was given until disease progression. Total number of cycles was 202 for 5-FU and 248 for CPT-11. The relative dose intensity was 1.0 for 5-FU and 0.84 for CPT-11. No grade 3-4 toxicity was registered in patients who received 5-FU. Grade 3- 4 toxicity rates were as follows in those who received CPT-11: vomiting 1 (5.9%) patient in 1 cycle, diarrhea 3 (17.7%) patients in 3 cycles and neutropenia in 3 (17.7%) patients in 3 cycles. No patients manifested febrile neutropenia. Two patients (11.8%) needed hospital admission because of toxicity: 1 for vomiting and 1 for diarrhea. No objective responses were observed in the 5-FU group of patients. Three patients (17.6%) who received CPT-11, achieved partial response with a median duration of 8 months. Stable disease was registered in 3 (17.6%) and 9 (52.9%) patients in 5-FU and CPT-11 groups respectively (p=0.05). Median time to progression was 3.3 months for patients who received 5-FU and 4.2 months for those treated with CPT-11 (not significant). One-year survival was 22.2% and 54.3% respectively (p=0.05).  相似文献   

3.
Background:To determine the dose-limiting toxicity of CPT-11 incombination with oxaliplatin, and the maximal tolerated dose (MTD) and therecommended dose (RD) of CPT-11 using an every two weeks schedule. Patients and methods:The study was designed to evaluate escalateddoses of CPT-11 starting at 100 mg/m2 with a fixedclinically-relevant dose of 85 mg/m2 oxaliplatin given every twoweeks. Results:Twenty-three patients and 186 cycles were evaluable fortoxicity (median per patient: 7, range: 1–13). Grade 3oxaliplatin-induced neurotoxicity was cumulative and limiting in 39%(9 of 23) of patients. The MTD of CPT-11 was 200 mg/m2, withincomplete neutrophil recovery at day 15 as limiting toxicity. At the RD (175mg/m2 of CPT-11): no grade 4 neutropenia was seen in the two firstcycles; 30% of patients experienced grade 3–4 diarrhea. Febrileneutropenia (3.2% of all cycles) was 3-fold more frequent inperformance status (PS) 2 than in PS 0–1 patients. Among elevencolorectal cancer (CRC) patients, three complete and four partial responseswere documented, including in three 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) refractory patients. Conclusion:To combine CPT-11 175 mg/m2 and oxaliplatin85 mg/m2 every two weeks is feasible in an outpatient setting, andvery active in 5-FU resistant CRC patients. A dose of 150 mg/m2CPT-11 is recommended in PS 2 patients.  相似文献   

4.
Standard chemotherapy in advanced colorectal carcinoma (CRC) has not yet been established. The present study was conducted to assess the efficacy and toxicity profile of CPT-11, leucovorin (LV), and bolus 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) in a weekly schedule. Fifty-five patients were entered with no prior chemotherapy for advanced disease or adjuvant treatment ended at least 6 months preceding study entry, and 45 were assessable for response. Patients were treated with CPT-11 80 mg/m2 (7 patients) or 70 mg/m2 (48 patients). After completion of CPT-11 infusion, LV 200 mg/m2 was administered over 2 hr followed immediately by 5-FU 450 mg/m2, IV bolus, weekly for 6 weeks followed by a 2-week rest period. Treatment was continued for four cycles. Because of grade 3 and 4 diarrhea in four of the first seven patients, the study was amended to reduce the starting dose of CPT-11 from 80 to 70 mg/m2 weekly. Four complete and 10 partial responses were observed (response rate: 25.5%), the median time to progression (TTP) was 7.7 months, 1-year survival rate was 62.3%, and the median overall survival was 15.0 months. Grade 3 and 4 diarrhea occurred in seven patients (12.7%), four of them treated with CPT-11 80 mg/m2. Grade 3 myelotoxicity occurred in five patients (9.0%). Toxic death because of diarrhea, neutropenia, bacteremia, and sepsis occurred in a patient treated with CPT-11 80 mg/m2. Our results confirm the efficacy of CPT-11, LV, and 5-FU in a weekly schedule in patients with advanced CRC. Further studies are needed to compare the present regimen with higher doses of CPT-11 with LV plus different schedules of 5-FU administration in the treatment of metastatic CRC.  相似文献   

5.

Background

The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of irinotecan (CPT-11) monotherapy and CPT-11 plus 5-fluorouracil (5-FU)/leucovorin (LV) combination (mFOLFIRI) as second-line treatment in patients with advanced gastric cancer (AGC).

Methods

A total of 59 patients were randomly assigned to either CPT-11 (150 mg/m2 iv on day 1) or mFOLFIRI (CPT-11 150 mg/m2 plus LV 20 mg/m2 on day 1 followed by 5-FU 2,000 mg/m2 over 48 h), every 2 weeks. The primary end point was objective response rate (ORR).

Results

Following random assignment, 29 patients received CPT-11 and 30 patients mFOLFIRI. The ORR was 17.2 % [95 % confidence interval (CI) 3.4–30.9] and 20.0 % (95 % CI 5.6–34.3) for the CPT-11 and mFOLFIRI arms, respectively (P = 0.525). There was no significant difference in median progression-free survival: 2.2 months (95 % CI 0.2–4.3) for CPT-11 versus 3.0 months (95 % CI 2.0–3.7) for mFOLFIRI (P = 0.481) or in median overall survival: 5.8 months (95 % CI 3.0–8.7), compared with 6.7 months (95 % CI 5.3–8.2) (P = 0.514). Grade 3/4 toxicity was observed in 21 and 28 events in the CPT-11 and mFOLFIRI arms, respectively.

Conclusions

Although this study had a small sample size and limited statistical power, CPT-11 monotherapy and mFOLFIRI appear to be equally active and tolerable as second-line chemotherapy for AGC. The addition of 5-FU/LV to CPT-11 did not significantly improve efficacy.  相似文献   

6.
The aim of this prospective study was to assess the efficacy, clinical benefit and safety of CPT-11 (irinotecan) in patients with stringently-defined 5-fluorouracil-resistant metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC). 107 patients with documented progression of metastatic CRC during 5-FU were treated with CPT-11 350 mg/m2 once every 3 weeks in a multicentre phase II study. Tumour response and toxicity were assessed using WHO criteria. Changes in performance status (PS), weight and pain were also measured. The WHO response rate was 13/95 (13.7%, 95% CI 7.5% to 22.3%) eligible patients with a median duration of response of 8.5 months (37 weeks, range: 18-53+). There was also a high rate of disease stabilisation (44.2%) with a median duration of 4.8 months. The probability of being free of progression at 4 months was 50%. Median survival from first administration of CPT-11 was 10.4 months or 45 weeks (range: 3-66+ weeks). There was weight stabilisation or gain in 81% (73/90) of patients, a favourable outcome in PS in 91% (82/90) (improvement of WHO PS 2 or stabilisation of PS 0-1), and pain relief in 54% (26/48). There were no toxic deaths. Neutropenia was short-lasting and non-cumulative. Diarrhoea grade > or = 3 occurred in 7% of cycles and 28/107 (26%) of patients. CPT-11 350 mg/m2 once every 3 weeks has an encouraging degree of activity in progressive metastatic CRC truly resistant to 5-FU with a relatively high rate of tumour growth control translated into clinical benefit. The toxicity profile of CPT-11 is becoming better understood and has been considerably improved.  相似文献   

7.
A dose-finding study was designed to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of a bimonthly 12-h (10:00 p.m to 10:00 a.m), timed flat infusion (TFI) of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) plus irinotecan (CPT-11), without leucovorin (LV), for metastatic colorectal carcinoma (CRC). A total of 33 patients were treated. Seven dose levels included a fixed CPT-11 dose of 180 mg/m2 on days 1 and 15 (d(1,15)) and escalating doses of 5-FU 600-1200 mg/m2 on days 1-4 and 15-18 (d(1-4,15-18)). Dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) were: grade 3-4 non-hematologic, grade 4 hematologic and any toxicity causing a more than a 2-week delay in treatment. The MTD was reached at the seventh dose level. DLTs were observed in 5/8 patients (63%): G3 diarrhea, 2 patients, associated with G3 mucositis in one instance; G4 neutropenia, 2 patients, associated with severe asthenia in 1 patient; G3 hand-foot syndrome, 1 patient. The recommended doses (RDs) were established at the sixth dose level: 5-FU, 1100 mg/m2/d(1-4,15-18); CPT-11 180 mg/m2/d(1,15) [5-FU and CPT-11 dose intensity (DI), 2200 and 90 mg/m2 per week (w), respectively]. At the recommended dose, the DLTs in 38 cycles were: mucositis, 2 cycles (5%); afebrile G4 neutropenia and hand-foot syndrome, 1 cycle (3%). In 24 assessable patients, the overall response rate was 37.5%. The present CPT-11/5-FU schedule is highly tolerable in an outpatient setting using the highest recommended 5-FU dose effective in advanced CRC.  相似文献   

8.
This study is a retrospective analysis of response, toxicity and freedom from progression of two single-agent chemotherapy regimens in patients with previously treated metastatic colorectal cancer. Thirty-five patients with histologically confirmed measurable metastatic colorectal cancer received chemotherapy after failure of first-line 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and leucovorin treatment. The median age was 61 years. Twenty-seven patients had liver metastases, 6 had local recurrence, 1 had retroperitoneal lymph node metastases and 1 had lung metastases. Eighteen patients received weekly 2600 mg/m2 5-FU and 17 patients received weekly 125 mg/m2 irinotecan (CPT-11). Treatment was given until disease progression. Total number of cycles was 202 for 5-FU and 248 for CPT-11. The relative dose intensity was 1.0 for 5-FU and 0.84 for CPT-11. No grade 3-4 toxicity was registered in patients who received 5-FU. Grade 3-4 toxicity rates were as follows in those who received CPT-11: vomiting 1 (5.9%) patient in 1 cycle, diarrhea 3 (17.7%) patients in 3 cycles and neutropenia in 3 (17.7%) patients in 3 cycles. No patients manifested febrile neutropenia. Two patients (11.8%) needed hospital admission because of toxicity: 1 for vomiting and 1 for diarrhea. No objective responses were observed in the 5-FU group of patients. Three patients (17.6%) who received CPT-11, achieved partial response with a median duration of 8 months. Stable disease was registered in 3 (17.6%) and 9 (52.9%) patients in 5-FU and CPT-11 groups respectively (p=0.05). Median time to progression was 3.3 months for patients who received 5-FU and 4.2 months for those treated with CPT-11 (not significant). One-year survival was 22.2% and 54.3% respectively (p=0.05). Conclusion: Weekly chemotherapy with CPT-11 is tolerated with acceptable toxicity and leads to a better response rate than weekly high dose 5-FU. It also significantly improves survival but does not prolong freedom from progression.  相似文献   

9.
BACKGROUND: A phase I-II multicenter trial was conducted to define the maximal tolerated dose and describe the activity of an OCFL combination using oxaliplatin (OHP), irinotecan (CPT-11) and 5-fluorouracil (FU)/leucovorin (LV) in metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC). PATIENTS AND METHODS: CRC patients not pretreated with palliative chemotherapy, with performance status < or =1 and adequate haematological, kidney and liver function, were eligible. Treatment consisted in weekly 24-h infusion 5-FU (2300 mg/m(2))/LV (30 mg) and alternating OHP (70-85 mg/m(2), days 1 and 15) and CPT-11 (80-140 mg/m(2), days 8 and 22) repeated every 5 weeks. OHP and CPT-11 were escalated in cohorts of three to six patients. RESULTS: Thirty patients received a median of five cycles. Dose-limiting toxicity occurred at dose level 3, and the recommended dose was OHP 70 mg/m(2), CPT-11 100 mg/m(2), LV 30 mg and 5-FU 2300 mg/m(2)/24 h. Grade > or =3 toxicities were diarrhea 23%, neutropenia 20%, fatigue 7%, and neurologic 7%. Two febrile neutropenia episodes (one fatal) were recorded. Among 28 patients with measurable disease (90%), we observed two complete and 20 partial responses; overall RR was 78% (95% CI, 59% to 92%). Median time to progression and overall survival were 9.5 and 25.4 months, respectively. Seven patients underwent liver metastases resection. CONCLUSION: OCFL is an overall well tolerated regimen with very high efficacy, which makes it most suitable for tumour control before surgery of metastatic disease.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract

This study was conducted to assess the tolerability and efficacy of a ternary bi-monthly irinotecan (CPT-11) - oxaliplatin (OHP) - infusional 5-fluorouracil (5-FU)/folinic acid (FA) combination in advanced colorectal cancer patients who had received prior CPT-11 and/or OHP-based chemotherapy regimen. Colorectal cancer patients were given bimonthly CPT-11 as a 90-min infusion, followed by OHP (85 mg/m2), FA (200 mg/m2) 2-h infusions and 5-FU (48-h infusion). CPT-11 and 5-FU doses were escalated as reported below. 26 patients were recruited. Fourteen patients had received a prior CPT-11-, 6 patients a prior OHP-based chemotherapy regimen and 6 patients both regimens. Three dose levels were investigated: CPT-11 100, 120 and 140 mg/m2 and 5-FU 1500, 1800 and 2100 mg/m2 in 6, 12 and 8 patients, respectively. All patients were evaluable for toxicity, 24 for antitumor activity. At all dose levels toxicity was ac-ceptable. Grade 4 toxicity occurred in two patients only (neutropenia in one case and stomatitis in another one, 3.8%). Grade 3 toxicities included nausea and vomiting (34.6%), asthenia (26.9%), neurosensory toxicity (15.4%), neutropenia (3.8%) and di-arrhea (3.8%). Hematological toxicity was infrequent and generally mild. At the third dose level, a higher, although not significantly different incidence of hematological and neurosensory toxicity (both occurring in 62.5% of cases, all grades) was observed compared to the other two, while nausea and vomiting were significantly less frequent (37.5% vs 100%). Overall, we observed 2 complete responses, 9 partial responses (OR 45.8%), 8 stable disease (33.3%), and 5 disease progression (20.8%). Median overall survival was 18 months and median time-to-progression 5.5 months. This combination showed moderate toxicity and promising antitumor activity in CPT-11 and/or OHP pretreated colorectal cancer patients. The second dose level using CPT-11 at 120 mg/m2 and 5-FU at 1800 mg/m2 is recommended for further phase II studies in this patient population.  相似文献   

11.
This multicenter, open-label, phase II study was performed to assess the efficacy and toxicity of irinotecan 350 mg/m2 intravenously every 3 weeks in patients with advanced colorectal cancer (CRC) previously treated with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). The study enrolled 115 patients and a total of 558 cycles (median, 6 per patient) were administered. The overall objective response rate on an intent-to-treat basis was 18% (with 1 complete response and 20 partial responses), whereas 42 patients (37%) showed stable disease. Median time to progression was 4.8 months and median survival was 13.6 months. Grade 3/4 toxicities included delayed diarrhea (19.1%), nausea/vomiting (10.4%), and neutropenia (8.7%). There were 2 toxic deaths, 1 from delayed diarrhea and 1 from hemorrhage and grade 4 mucositis. In conclusion, the present study confirms the antitumor efficacy of irinotecan monotherapy in patients with CRC pretreated with 5-FU.  相似文献   

12.
Introduction This phase II study investigated the anti-tumour activity and toxicity of CPT-11 (250 mg/m2 i.v. infusion over 60 minutes) administered every 2 weeks as second-line chemotherapy in patients with advanced colorectal cancer (CRC). Material and methods Patients (n=63) with histology diagnosis of advanced CRC and proven resistance to previous fluoropyrimidine therapy were enrolled. Results A total of 510 CPT-11 cycles were administered, with a mean of 8 cycles per patient (range: 1–32). The median relative dose intensity was 93%. Partial response (PR) was obtained in 11 patients (17.5%; 95%CI: 8.1%–26.7%) and 29 patients (46.0%) showed stable disease (clinical benefit of 63.5%). The median duration of response was 6.8 months (95%CI: 6.1–7.5 months), median survival was 8.8 months (95%CI: 6.3–11.5 months) and median time to disease progression was 4.5 months (95%CI: 3.9–5.0 months). Overall, this schedule of CPT-11 chemotherapy was well tolerated by the patient. Neutropenia was the most frequent grade 3/4 haematological toxicity (20.6% of patients and 4.1% of cycles). Neutropenia with concurrent fever or infection occurred in 7 patients (11.1%). Late onset diarrhoea was the most frequent grade 3/4 non-haematological toxicity (19.0% of patients and 2.3% of cycles). Other, lower-incidence, toxicities were anaemia, fever, infection, mucositis, nausea and vomiting. There were no toxic deaths. Conclusions We found that CPT-11, administered as 250 mg/m2 i.v. infusion over 60 minutes every 2 weeks, was active and well tolerated schedule in the second-line chemotherapy of advanced CRC patients. This bi-weekly scheme could be used as an alternative to the weekly or the every-three-week schedule as well as in combined therapies with other chemotherapeutic agents for the treatment of advanced, metastatic, CRC.  相似文献   

13.
PURPOSE: To evaluate the efficacy and tolerance of the gemcitabine/oxaliplatin (GEMOX) combination as second-line chemotherapy for patients with advanced colorectal cancer (CRC) pretreated with an irinotecan (CPT-11)/5-fluorouracil (5-FU)/leucovorin (LV) regimen. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients with documented disease progression during or after first-line treatment with CPT-11 and 5-FU/LV were enrolled. Gemcitabine (1,000 mg/m(2) days 1 and 8) and oxaliplatin (100 mg/m(2) day 1) were administered every 3 weeks. RESULTS: Partial responses were observed in 6 of the 34 (17.7%) patients enrolled (intention-to-treat analysis; overall response rate: 17.7%; 95% confidence interval 4.8-30.5%). Eight (23.5%) patients experienced disease stabilization and 20 (59%) disease progression (tumor growth control rate = 41.2%). The median duration of response was 5.5 months, and the median time to tumor progression 2.7 months. The median overall survival was 9.1 months (1-year survival rate: 44.0%). Grade 3 neutropenia and thrombocytopenia occurred in 18 and 15% of the patients, respectively. Other severe non-hematologic toxicities were rare. CONCLUSION: The interesting tumor growth control rate and the favorable toxicity profile of the GEMOX regimen in pretreated patients with advanced CRC strongly suggest that this regimen may provide an alternative therapeutic option for this group of patients.  相似文献   

14.
Purpose The aim of this study was to investigate the therapeutic value and safety of third-line treatment with mitomycin-C (MMC) and capecitabine (Xeloda) in patients with advanced colorectal cancer pretreated with combination regimens including 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), folinic acid (FA) and irinotecan (CPT-11) or 5-FU, FA and oxaliplatin (L-OHP).Patients and methods A total of 21 patients (M/F 16/5, median age 60.0 years) with advanced colorectal cancer, all of whom had developed progressive disease while receiving or within 6 months of discontinuing two sequential chemotherapy lines with 5-FU, FA and CPT-11 or 5-FU, FA and L-OHP, were accrued to this study. At the time of their relapse or progression, cytotoxic chemotherapy, consisting of intravenous MMC 7 mg/m2 on therapeutic day 1 plus oral capecitabine 1000 mg/m2 twice daily on days 1–14, was initiated. After rest for 7 days, capecitabine 1000 mg/m2 twice daily was administered on days 22–35 followed by 7 days rest. Treatment courses were repeated every 6 weeks unless there was evidence of progressive disease, unacceptable toxicity or patient refusal of treatment.Results All the patients were assessable for toxicity and 19 for response. The median number cycles of chemotherapy was two (range one to four). Only 1 patient (4.8%) had a partial response, 4 patients (19.0%) had stable disease, and 14 patients (66.7%) progressed. The median follow-up period was 7.3 months and median time to progression was 2.6 months. The median overall survival was 6.8 months. No toxic deaths occurred. Toxicities of third-line treatment were mild and manageable. As NCI/NIH common toxicity criteria, grade 3/4 anemia, neutropenia and thrombocytopenia occurred in two, one and one patients, respectively.Conclusion Our findings suggest that the combination of MMC and capecitabine in patients with advanced colorectal cancer pretreated with combination regimens including 5-FU, FA and CPT-11 or 5-FU, FA and L-OHP is safe. However, this regimen had a poor response rate and no definitive contribution to increasing patients overall survival time. Further evaluation of other salvage regimens seems to be warranted.  相似文献   

15.
PURPOSE: To determine the maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) and recommended dose of irinotecan (CPT-11) in combination with fluorouracil (5-FU) and leucovorin (LV), using a biweekly LV5FU2 regimen and increasing doses of CPT-11, and to assess the efficacy of this combination in pretreated patients with colorectal cancer (CRC). PATIENTS AND METHODS: All patients had metastatic CRC and a World Health Organization performance status of 0 or 1. CPT-11 was administered over a 90-minute infusion every 2 weeks at a range of dose levels (100, 120, 150, 180, 200, 220, and 260 mg/m(2)). LV5FU2 was started 1 hour after the end of the biweekly CPT-11 infusion and was also administered on day 2. RESULTS: Fifty-five patients were entered onto this trial; 549 cycles were administered. The MTD was not reached at 260 mg/m(2), and a dose level of 300 mg/m(2) was added. The MTD as defined in the protocol was not reached at this dose level either, but all patients had cycles delayed and/or required a dose reduction. This dose was deemed to be the MTD. To take into account both the toxicity of and compliance with the biweekly schedule, the recommended CPT-11 dose was established at 180 to 200 mg/m(2). Antitumor activity was observed at almost all dose levels, with an objective response rate of 22%. Median time to progression was 6.3 months and overall survival was 15 months. CONCLUSION: The biweekly CPT-11/LV5FU2 combination is feasible and safe, without overlapping toxicity. CPT-11 at 180 to 200 mg/m(2) in combination with LV5FU2 has been selected as the recommended dose for further studies.  相似文献   

16.
CPT-11 (irinotecan) has shown activity in patients with advanced colorectal cancer resistant to leucovorin (LV) and 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). In this study, the simplified bimonthly LV-5-FU regimen was combined with CPT-11 (FOLFIRI) as third-line therapy for patients with advanced colorectal cancer. Continuous infusion of 5-FU was administered with disposable pumps as outpatient therapy. FOLFIRI consisted of CPT-11 180 mg/m2 as a 90-min infusion day 1; LV 400 mg/m2 as a 2-h infusion during CPT-11, immediately followed by 5-FU bolus 400 mg/m2 and 46-h continuous infusion of 2.4-3 g/m2 every 2 weeks. Among the 33 patients treated, 2 had partial responses for an overall response rate of 6%; 20 patients were stabilised (61%) and 11 had disease progression (33%). From the start of FOLFIRI, median progression-free survival was 18 weeks and median survival was 43 weeks. For the 242 cycles analysed, NCI-CTC toxicities grade 3-4 per patient were nausea 15%, diarrhoea 12% and neutropenia 15%. Overall, 10 patients (30%) experienced grade 3-4 toxicity. 7 patients (21%) had grade 2 alopecia. FOLFIRI generated activity and acceptable toxicity, in heavily pretreated patients, with limited diarrhoea, mostly asymptomatic neutropenia and manageable nausea and relatively uncommon alopecia. This regimen is suitable for studies in chemotherapy-na?ve patients.  相似文献   

17.
Irinotecan (CPT-11) is an effective drug in patients with advanced colorectal cancer (CRC). Little is known about its efficacy and safety in previously treated patients with poor performance status. We prospectively evaluated the antitumor efficacy and safety of CPT-11 monotherapy in this setting. Thirty-four patients with poor performance status (Karnofsky score between 60 and 80) and/or progressing on one or more previous 5-FU-based chemotherapy lines for advanced colorectal adenocarcinoma were enrolled in this study. Treatment consisted of irinotecan (CPT-11) at 100 mg/m2 administered as a 60-min iv infusion every week for four consecutive weeks followed by a 2-wk rest period until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. The overall objective response rate (WHO criteria) for the 34 patients included was 20.6% [95% confidence interval (CI): 6.3%–34.9%]. Stable disease was obtained in 13 patients (38.2%) and 14 patients (41.2%) progressed. The median time to disease progression was 5.5 mo (range: 0.9–17.5) and the median survival was 8.3 mo (95% CI: 1.7–16.9). Overall, weekly CPT-11 was well tolerated with grade 3/4 neutropenia as the main hematological toxicity (11 patients: 32.4%; 14 infusions: 3.3%), and delayed diarrhea (10 patients: 29.4%; 16 infusions: 3.8%) as the main grade 3/4 non-hematological toxicity. In conclusion, weekly CPT-11 at 100 mg/m2 for four consecutive weeks followed by a 2-wk rest period showed antitumor efficacy and may be safely administered to heavily pretreated patients with advanced colorectal cancer and a poor performance status. Weekly CPT-11 monotherapy may be considered as a therapeutic option for this population of patients.  相似文献   

18.
AIMS AND BACKGROUND: To identify the maximum tolerated doses and to define the activity of a regimen incorporating leucovorin (LV)-modulated 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) bolus and continuous infusion, oxaliplatin (I-OHP) and irinotecan (CPT-11) in patients with advanced, 5-FU-refractory colorectal cancer (CRC). PATIENTS AND METHODS: Starting doses: LV 100 mg/m2 as a 2-hour infusion followed by 5-FU 300 mg/m2 bolus administration followed by 5-FU 500 mg/m2 as a 22-hour infusion on days 1 and 2; I-OHP 65 mg/m2 as a 2-hour infusion concomitantly with LV on day 1; CPT-11 90 mg/m2 concomitantly with LV on day 2. Planned cycle interval: 2 weeks. RESULTS: Two hundred twenty-six cycles were administered to 27 patients. Recommended doses were 5-FU bolus 300 mg/m2, 5-FU protracted infusion 500 mg/m2, I-OHP 75 mg/m2, and CPT-11 150 mg/m2. Among 25 patients evaluable for response we observed 13 disease stabilizations (52%; 95% CI: 33-71%), 6 instances of disease progression and 6 responses (24%; 95% CI: 7-41%). Median time to progression and overall survival were 24 and 60 weeks, respectively. A cycle delay > 3 days was observed in 134/199 cycles (67%). CONCLUSIONS: This study confirms the feasibility of triplet chemotherapy in patients with advanced 5-FU-refractory CRC.  相似文献   

19.
Objectives: To determine the maximum tolerable doses (MTDs) of irinotecan (CPT-11) and 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) plus levo-folinic acid (LFA) administered together every two weeks, to define the toxicity profile of this regimen, and to have a preliminary evidence of its activity in the first-line management of advanced colorectal cancer patients.Patients and methods: Patients with histologically proven colorectal carcinoma, no prior chemotherapy for their advanced disease, and with at least one measurable or evaluable indicator lesion, were admitted to this study. The starting dose of CPT-11 was 150 mg/m2 given i.v. (90 min infusion) on day 1, followed on day 2 by a fixed dose of LFA (250 mg/m2) as a two-hour i.v. infusion plus a starting dose of 5-FU 600 mg/m2 as i.v. bolus. No intra-patient dose escalation was allowed. If no dose limiting toxicity (DLT) was observed among three patients of each cohort, CPT-11 and 5-FU were alternately escalated in the subsequent cohort. Otherwise, three more patients were enrolled at the same dose level. DLT was defined as: WHO grade 3 non-haematological toxicity (except for vomiting or alopecia), grade 3 febrile neutropenia, grade 4 neutro- or thombocytopenia, or a >2-week delay in recycling. The MTDs were defined as the doses at which two of three, or four of six, patients showed the same DLT.Results: Thirty-one patients (five pretreated in adjuvant setting) were enrolled in this study, and a total number of 293 cycles (median 6/patient) were administered. Dose escalation safely proceeded to 210/950/250 mg/m2 of CPT-11/5-FU/LFA. These dosages were considered as MTDs, since four of six patients showed grade 4 neutropenia, in one case associated with grade 3 stomatitis. A mild decrease of both the CPT-11 and 5-FU doses to 200 and 850 mg/m2, respectively, caused different DLTs (neutropenia and diarrhoea) in two out of seven patients. At these dosages, transient grades 3 or 4 neutropenia affected two patients each during their treatment, while only one patient suffered from a severe delayed diarrhoea. Other non-haematological toxicities were mild and manageable. Therefore, we recommend this latter dose level for further study. Major responses (3 complete and 11 partial) were reported in 14 patients, for an overall response rate of 45% (95% CI: 27%–64%) according to an intent-to-treat analysis. Responses were observed from first dose level, and in four of five previously treated patients. Median failure-free and overall survivals, after a median follow-up of 39 weeks, were 42 and 55 weeks, respectively.Conclusions: The concurrent administration of CPT-11 and modulated 5-FU every two weeks is feasible at the recommended dosages. This regimen demonstrated interesting activity in the management of advanced colorectal cancer patients, and it probably better exploits the synergism between CPT-11 and 5-FU than recently tested alternating schedules. A phase II study is ongoing to more precisely define its activity and toxicity.  相似文献   

20.
This multicentre phase II study was designed to evaluate the antitumour activity and toxicity of bifractionated camptothecin (CPT-11) and 5-fluorouracil/ leucovorin (5-FU/LV) in the treatment of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (MCC) who had been pretreated with 5-FU/LV-oxaliplatin (FOLFOX regimen). In all, 35 patients were enrolled in a two-stage trial. Treatment consisted of two daily doses of CPT-11, 90 mg m2 administered over 90 min, followed by LV, 200 mg m2 administered over 2 h plus 5-FU 400 mg m2 as a bolus and 600 mg m2 as a 22-h continuous infusion administered with disposable pumps as outpatient therapy. Toxicity was closely monitored. Response was evaluated by computed tomography scans every 8 weeks. All 35 patients were assessable for toxicity and response to treatment. Seven patients had a partial response, giving an overall response rate of 20%; 11 patients had stable disease (31.4%) and 17 progressed (48.5%). The median progression-free survival was 7.1 months and median survival was 14 months. A total of 10 patients (30%) experienced grade 3-4 toxicity, including nausea (15%), diarrhoea (12%) and neutropenia (15%), while seven patients (21%) had grade 2 alopecia. The bifractionated bimonthly schedule of CPT-11 plus 5-FU/LV showed substantial antitumour activity and was well tolerated in this group of patients with a poor prognosis, pretreated with the FOLFOX regimen.  相似文献   

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