1. Concomitant brain radiotherapy and high-dose ifosfamide in brain relapses of lung cancer
- Author
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F. Khial, F.-B. Michel, Xavier Quantin, M. Reme-Saumon, A. Paris, P. Godard, and J.L. Pujol
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Metastasis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Ifosfamide ,Prospective Studies ,Lung cancer ,Antineoplastic Agents, Alkylating ,Aged ,Chemotherapy ,Brain Neoplasms ,business.industry ,Respiratory disease ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Surgery ,Radiation therapy ,Concomitant ,Female ,Cranial Irradiation ,business ,medicine.drug ,Brain metastasis - Abstract
Summary Patients and methods Twenty patients with lung cancer and brain metastasis were prospectively included in this feasibility study (four small-cell and 16 non-small-cell lung cancers). There were two previously untreated patients and 18 pretreated patients for whom brain metastases constituted the first re lapse after a treatment-free interval followmg chemotherapy for the primary lung cancer. Most of the patients had neuro logical symptoms and an ECOG performance index over 2. Treatment consisted of three courses of whole brain radio therapy (18 Gy in 10 fractions) and ifosfamide: 3 g/m2 daily from day 1 through day 4, i.e., during the first four days of radiotherapy with uromitexan uroprotection and haemato poietic support (r-HuG-CSF). Results Seventeen patients completed the three-cycle programme. Sixteen patients had grade 4 neutropema and six of them experienced a febrile episode. Other toxicities were mild to moderate and manageable. The received dose-intensity of ifosfamide was 90%. Response evaluation demonstrated stable disease for two patients, partial response for eight, complete response for six and progression for four. All responders benefited by a remission of symptoms and improvement of performance index. Median survival from start of protocol was 13 months. Conclusion Brain radiotherapy plus high-dose ifosfamide is feasible in patients suffering from brain recurrences of lung cancer.
- Published
- 1997
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