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Treatment of uterine papillary serous carcinoma with paclitaxel.
Authors:L Ramondetta  T W Burke  C Levenback  M Bevers  D Bodurka-Bevers  D M Gershenson
Affiliation:Department of Gynecologic Oncology, The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, 77030, USA. lramonde@mail.mdanderson.org
Abstract:OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to determine the effectiveness and toxicity of monthly treatment with intravenous paclitaxel for women with advanced or recurrent uterine papillary serous carcinoma (UPSC). METHODS: Consenting women with histologically confirmed advanced (FIGO stage III or IV) or recurrent UPSC were treated on an Institutional Review Board approved protocol of a 24-h intravenous infusion of 200 mg/m(2) of paclitaxel every 3 weeks. Both measurable and nonmeasurable disease cases were enrolled. Treatment was continued until disease progression, patient intolerance, or (in women with nonmeasurable disease) completion of six courses. RESULTS: Twenty patients received from 1 to 11 cycles of therapy. Two women died of disease after 1 cycle of therapy and were not evaluable for response. Among 13 women with measurable tumor receiving 2 or more cycles of therapy, 4 had a complete clinical response and 6 had a partial response (objective response rate, 77%). The median time to progression was 7.3 months (range, 2-21 months). All 3 remaining patients with measurable disease had stable disease for a median of 6 months. The 5 patients without evaluable disease received 5 to 6 cycles of adjuvant paclitaxel. Three developed recurrence (range, 4-10 months; median, 7.2 months). Neutropenia was the major toxicity. Eleven of the 20 patients required G-CSF support, and 9 were hospitalized for neutropenic fever. One woman had reversible cardiac symptoms, which might have been related to paclitaxel treatment. At the time of analysis (mean follow-up, 23 months; range, 4.3-59.9 months), 13 women had died of disease, 4 were alive with disease, and 2 were disease free. All 3 disease-free patients had been treated for nonmeasurable advanced stage disease. CONCLUSION: Paclitaxel appears to have excellent activity in the treatment of advanced or recurrent UPSC, an uncommon but aggressive malignancy. Longer survival appears to be more common among women with small-volume disease.
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