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Cetuximab: new drug. Metastatic colorectal cancer: an inappropriate evaluation
Abstract:(1) In patients with metastatic colorectal cancer initially treated with irinotecan combination therapy, second-line therapy with a combination of fluorouracil, folinic acid and oxaliplatin resulted in a median survival time of 21 months after the start of first-line chemotherapy, in one clinical trial. (2) Cetuximab, an antibody directed against the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), is indicated for patients with EGF-expressing metastatic colorectal cancer, after failure of irinotecan-based chemotherapy. (3) A comparative trial involving 329 patients showed that the cetuximab + irinotecan combination was more effective than cetuximab monotherapy in terms of progression-free survival time (4.1 versus 1.5 months). Three non comparative trials did not show that adding cetuximab to irinotecan improved the efficacy of irinotecan. (4) Nearly 90% of patients taking cetuximab developed cutaneous adverse effects (usually acne), which were severe in about 15% of cases. About 5% of cetuximab infusions were associated with occasionally severe hypersensitivity reactions. (5) More pertinent comparative trials are underway, but no detailed results were available on 29 April 2005. (6) The cetuximab packaging is somewhat impractical. (7) In practice, given its known toxicity and unproven efficacy, cetuximab currently has no place in the second-line treatment of colorectal cancer.
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