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Postoperative radiation and concomitant bolus fluorouracil with or without additional chemotherapy with fluorouracil and high-dose leucovorin in patients with high-risk rectal cancer: A randomized phase III study conducted by the hellenic cooperative oncology group
- Source :
- Annals of Oncology
- Publication Year :
- 1999
-
Abstract
- Summary Background Randomized studies have shown that postoperative chemotherapy with or without radiation therapy (RT) improved local control and survival of patients with stages II or III rectal cancer. However, the optimal sequence of treatments and the optimal chemotherapeutic regimen have not been defined. Modulation of fluorouracil (FU) by leucovorin (LV) has yielded a highly significant difference in response rate from that of FU monotherapy, as suggested by an overview of randomized trials in patients with advanced colorectal cancer. However, this difference in response rate did not translate into a survival benefit. Purpose To evaluate the impact on the disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) of patients with stages II or III rectal cancer of postoperative RT and concomitant bolus FU administration alone or with additional chemotherapy using FU and high-dose LV. Patients and methods From October 1989 until February 1997, 220 patients were randomized postoperatively to receive either one cycle of chemotherapy with FU (600 mg/m2/week × 6 followed by a two-week rest) and leucovorin (LV, 500 mg/m2/week × 6 as a two-hour infusion) followed by pelvic RT with concomitant FU (400 mg/m2) as a rapid intravenous injection during the first three and last three days of RT, and three more cycles of the same chemotherapy with FU and LV (standard, group A, 111 patients) or pelvic RT with concomitant FU only (experimental, group B, 109 patients). Results As of August 1998, after a median follow-up of 4.9 years, there was no significant difference in either three-year DFS (Group A, 70.3%; group B, 68.2%, P = 0.53) or OS (group A, 77%; group B, 73.3%, P = 0.75). Cox multivariate analysis revealed stage of disease, number of infiltrated nodes, tumor grade, presence of regional implants and perforation to be significant prognostic factors. The incidence of severe side effects was significantly higher in the patients in group A than in those in group B (32.4% vs. 4.6%, P > 0.0001). Conclusions The incorporation of additional chemotherapy with FU and LV into postoperative concomitant RT and bolus infusion of FU does not offer a ≥ 10% three-year survival benefit over that of concomitant RT and bolus infusion of FU, and significantly increases toxicity in patients with stages II or III rectal cancer.
- Subjects :
- Male
Colorectal cancer
medicine.medical_treatment
Leucovorin
Gastroenterology
Bolus (medicine)
Phase 3 clinical trial
Controlled clinical trial
Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols
Treatment outcome
Rectal cancer
Middle aged
Priority journal
Radiation
Folinic acid
Combined modality therapy
Hematology
Middle Aged
Combined Modality Therapy
Chemotherapy regimen
Clinical trial
Treatment Outcome
Fluorouracil/administration & dosage
Oncology
Fluorouracil
Randomized controlled trial
Cancer radiotherapy
dosage/*therapeutic use
Injections, Intravenous
Rectum cancer
Leucovorin/administration & dosage
Female
Cancer chemotherapy
Intravenous
medicine.drug
Human
Adult
Diarrhea
Drug megadose
medicine.medical_specialty
Rectal neoplasms
Major clinical study
Drug Administration Schedule
Article
Injections
Postoperative care
Internal medicine
Antineoplastic combined chemotherapy protocols
medicine
Rectal Neoplasms/*drug therapy/pathology/radiotherapy
Humans
Aged
Chemotherapy
Rectal Neoplasms
business.industry
Drug administration schedule
Follow up
Survival analysis
medicine.disease
Survival Analysis
Cancer survival
Surgery
Radiation therapy
Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/administration &
Regimen
Concomitant
Intravenous drug administration
business
Controlled study
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Annals of Oncology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4cf44ee916f7366184745a0369af63d7