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A comparative study of intratumoral chemotherapy in advanced childhood common solid tumors

BACKGROUND: Advanced and inoperable solid tumors in children are great killer despite aggressive multimodality treatment. Intravenous chemotherapy, due to high dose of drug given systemically, at times leads to abandonment of therapy due to systemic toxicities. To overcome this problem lots of studi...

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Autores principales: Rahi, Rajeev, Vijyendra, K., Sharma, S. P., Aryya, N. C., Shukla, R. C., Pradhan, S., Singh, T. B., Gangopadhyay, A. N.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medknow Publications 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2721564/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19718288
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0970-1591.36704
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author Rahi, Rajeev
Vijyendra, K.
Sharma, S. P.
Aryya, N. C.
Shukla, R. C.
Pradhan, S.
Singh, T. B.
Gangopadhyay, A. N.
author_facet Rahi, Rajeev
Vijyendra, K.
Sharma, S. P.
Aryya, N. C.
Shukla, R. C.
Pradhan, S.
Singh, T. B.
Gangopadhyay, A. N.
author_sort Rahi, Rajeev
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Advanced and inoperable solid tumors in children are great killer despite aggressive multimodality treatment. Intravenous chemotherapy, due to high dose of drug given systemically, at times leads to abandonment of therapy due to systemic toxicities. To overcome this problem lots of studies are going on to explore alternative modes of giving anticancer drugs so as to decrease the systemic toxicities of the drugs and increase their therapeutic index at the same time. AIM: The study was conducted to know the results of anterior intratumoral chemotherapy and its comparison to anterior intravenous chemotherapy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Forty patients of advanced inoperable solid tumors in children (Wilms' tumor and neuroblastoma) between 2000-2004 were randomly allocated to two groups. Group A (20 patients) was given intratumoral chemotherapy while Group B (20 patients) was given intravenous chemotherapy. Both the groups were compared in terms of reduction in size and volume, resectability of tumor, histopathological changes and side-effects of chemotherapeutic drugs. The Institute's ethics committee approved this study. RESULTS: Males were predominant in both type of cases (Wilms' tumor and neuroblastoma) in both the groups (Group A and Group B). Mean age in the study was 3.27 years. All cases in Group A had Stage III disease except three cases which had Stage IV disease (one case of Wilms' tumor and two cases of neuroblastoma) while in Group B only two cases had Stage IV disease (one case of Wilms' tumor and one case of neuroblastoma). Intratumoral chemotherapy was found to be superior over intravenous chemotherapy in terms of reduction of size and volume (63% in Group A vs. 22% in Group B). The resectability was 70% in the intratumoral group in comparison to 40% in the intravenous group. The overall good histopathological response was 71% in Group A as opposed to 0% in Group B. Moreover, the incidence and severity of side-effects of chemotherapy and morbidity was less in intratumoral chemotherapy. Mortality was also low in Group A (5%) in comparison to Group B (20%). CONCLUSION: In this study intratumoral chemotherapy was found to be superior over intravenous chemotherapy in terms of better and early tumor regression, minimal side-effects, better tumor resectability and well response on histopathological criteria. This study is still going on at our center where different drug combinations, different drug doses, their toxicities, their mechanisms of action, their serum levels and long-term results of intratumoral mode of chemotherapy are to be evaluated thoroughly in future.
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spelling pubmed-27215642009-08-29 A comparative study of intratumoral chemotherapy in advanced childhood common solid tumors Rahi, Rajeev Vijyendra, K. Sharma, S. P. Aryya, N. C. Shukla, R. C. Pradhan, S. Singh, T. B. Gangopadhyay, A. N. Indian J Urol Original Article BACKGROUND: Advanced and inoperable solid tumors in children are great killer despite aggressive multimodality treatment. Intravenous chemotherapy, due to high dose of drug given systemically, at times leads to abandonment of therapy due to systemic toxicities. To overcome this problem lots of studies are going on to explore alternative modes of giving anticancer drugs so as to decrease the systemic toxicities of the drugs and increase their therapeutic index at the same time. AIM: The study was conducted to know the results of anterior intratumoral chemotherapy and its comparison to anterior intravenous chemotherapy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Forty patients of advanced inoperable solid tumors in children (Wilms' tumor and neuroblastoma) between 2000-2004 were randomly allocated to two groups. Group A (20 patients) was given intratumoral chemotherapy while Group B (20 patients) was given intravenous chemotherapy. Both the groups were compared in terms of reduction in size and volume, resectability of tumor, histopathological changes and side-effects of chemotherapeutic drugs. The Institute's ethics committee approved this study. RESULTS: Males were predominant in both type of cases (Wilms' tumor and neuroblastoma) in both the groups (Group A and Group B). Mean age in the study was 3.27 years. All cases in Group A had Stage III disease except three cases which had Stage IV disease (one case of Wilms' tumor and two cases of neuroblastoma) while in Group B only two cases had Stage IV disease (one case of Wilms' tumor and one case of neuroblastoma). Intratumoral chemotherapy was found to be superior over intravenous chemotherapy in terms of reduction of size and volume (63% in Group A vs. 22% in Group B). The resectability was 70% in the intratumoral group in comparison to 40% in the intravenous group. The overall good histopathological response was 71% in Group A as opposed to 0% in Group B. Moreover, the incidence and severity of side-effects of chemotherapy and morbidity was less in intratumoral chemotherapy. Mortality was also low in Group A (5%) in comparison to Group B (20%). CONCLUSION: In this study intratumoral chemotherapy was found to be superior over intravenous chemotherapy in terms of better and early tumor regression, minimal side-effects, better tumor resectability and well response on histopathological criteria. This study is still going on at our center where different drug combinations, different drug doses, their toxicities, their mechanisms of action, their serum levels and long-term results of intratumoral mode of chemotherapy are to be evaluated thoroughly in future. Medknow Publications 2007 /pmc/articles/PMC2721564/ /pubmed/19718288 http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0970-1591.36704 Text en © Indian Journal of Urology http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Rahi, Rajeev
Vijyendra, K.
Sharma, S. P.
Aryya, N. C.
Shukla, R. C.
Pradhan, S.
Singh, T. B.
Gangopadhyay, A. N.
A comparative study of intratumoral chemotherapy in advanced childhood common solid tumors
title A comparative study of intratumoral chemotherapy in advanced childhood common solid tumors
title_full A comparative study of intratumoral chemotherapy in advanced childhood common solid tumors
title_fullStr A comparative study of intratumoral chemotherapy in advanced childhood common solid tumors
title_full_unstemmed A comparative study of intratumoral chemotherapy in advanced childhood common solid tumors
title_short A comparative study of intratumoral chemotherapy in advanced childhood common solid tumors
title_sort comparative study of intratumoral chemotherapy in advanced childhood common solid tumors
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2721564/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19718288
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0970-1591.36704
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