1. Regorafenib is suitable for advanced colorectal cancer patients who have previously received trifluridine/tipiracil plus bevacizumab
- Author
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T. Ikoma, Toshihiko Matsumoto, Masahiro Takatani, Shogo Yamamura, Takao Tsuduki, Hiroki Nagai, Kou Miura, Hisateru Yasui, and Takanori Watanabe
- Subjects
Oncology ,Advanced colorectal cancer ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multidisciplinary ,Bevacizumab ,chemistry ,business.industry ,Regorafenib ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: Regorafenib is a standard salvage line therapy used for advanced colorectal cancer (CRC). Recently, FTD/TPI plus bevacizumab also showed promising efficacy as a salvage line therapy for advanced CRC. However, the efficacy and safety of regorafenib for patients with advanced CRC who have previously received trifluridine/tipiracil (TFTD) plus bevacizumab is unclear.Results: We retrospectively collected clinicopathologic data from patients with advanced CRC who received regorafenib after TFTD plus bevacizumab in multiple institutions between April 2017 and June 2020.Thirty-four advanced CRC patients who received regorafenib were analyzed. The median age was 66.5 (range 43−81 years), 11 patients were male, and all had an ECOG performance status(PS) of 0 or 1. Twenty-two patients had left-sided tumors, 18 patients had RAS mutants, and 1 patient had a BRAF V600E mutation. The response rate was 0%, and the disease control rate was 31%. The median progression-free survival was 70 days (95% CI: 56−91), and the overall survival was 233 days (95% CI: 188−324). Treatment was discontinued in 32 patients, and 28 (82%) discontinued treatment due to progressive disease. The major grade 3 and4 toxicities were proteinurea (29%), hypertension (26%), hand-foot syndrome(15%), and platelet decrease (6%).Conclusion: Regorafenib after TFTD plus bevacizumab showed efficacy similar to that of the previous study, and no new adverse events were observed.
- Published
- 2023