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Phase I–II study of docetaxel and ifosfamide combination in patients with anthracycline pretreated advanced breast cancer

Given the established individual activity of docetaxel and ifosfamide in anthracycline pretreated advanced breast cancer, the present phase I–II study aimed to define the maximum tolerated dose (MTD), the dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs), and activity of the docetaxel–ifosfamide combination in this s...

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Autores principales: Kosmas, C, Tsavaris, N, Malamos, N, Stavroyianni, N, Gregoriou, A, Rokana, S, Polyzos, A
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2747562/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12698179
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6600887
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author Kosmas, C
Tsavaris, N
Malamos, N
Stavroyianni, N
Gregoriou, A
Rokana, S
Polyzos, A
author_facet Kosmas, C
Tsavaris, N
Malamos, N
Stavroyianni, N
Gregoriou, A
Rokana, S
Polyzos, A
author_sort Kosmas, C
collection PubMed
description Given the established individual activity of docetaxel and ifosfamide in anthracycline pretreated advanced breast cancer, the present phase I–II study aimed to define the maximum tolerated dose (MTD), the dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs), and activity of the docetaxel–ifosfamide combination in this setting. Cohorts of three to six patients with histologically confirmed metastatic breast cancer after prior anthracycline-based chemotherapy were treated at successive dose levels (DLs) with escalated doses of docetaxel 70–100 mg m(−2) over 1 h on day 1 followed by ifosfamide 5–6 g m(−2) divided over days 1 and 2 (2.5–3.0 g m(−2) day(−1) over 1 h), and recycled every 21 days. G-CSF was added once dose-limiting neutropenia was encountered at a certain DL and planned to be incorporated prophylactically in subsequent higher DLs. In total, 56 patients with a median age of 54.5 (range, 32–72) years and performance status (WHO) of 1 (range, 0–2) were treated at five DLs as follows: 21 in phase I DLs (DL1: 3, DL2: 6, DL3: 3, DL4: 6, and DL5: 3) and the remaining 35 were treated at DL4 (total of 41 patients at DL4), which was defined as the level for phase II testing. All patients were assessable for toxicity and 53 for response. Dose-limiting toxicity (with the addition of G-CSF after DL2) was reached at DL5 with two out of three initial patients developing febrile neutropenia (FN). Clinical response rates, on an intention-to-treat basis, in phase II were: 53.6% (95% CI, 38.3–68.9%); three complete remissions, 19 partial remissions, seven stable disease, and 12 progressive disease. The median response duration was 7 months (3–24 months), median time to progression 6.5 month (0.1–26 month), and median overall survival 13 months (0.1–33 months). Grade 3/4 toxicities included time to progression neutropenia in 78% of patients–with 63% developing grade 4 neutropenia (⩽7 days) and in 12% of these FN, while no grade 3/4 thrombocytopenia was observed. Other toxicities included peripheral neuropathy grade 2 only in 12%, grade 1/2 reversible CNS toxicity in 17%, no renal toxicity, grade 2 myalgias in 10%, grade 3 diarrhoea in 10%, skin/nail toxicity in 17%, and grade 2 fluid retention in 2% of patients. One patient in the study treated at phase II died as a result of acute liver failure after the first cycle. In conclusion, the present phase I–II study determined the feasibility of the docetaxel–ifosfamide combination, defined the MTD and demonstrated the encouraging activity of the regimen in phase II, thus warranting further randomised phase III comparisons to single-agent docetaxel or combinations of the latter with other active agents.
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spelling pubmed-27475622009-09-21 Phase I–II study of docetaxel and ifosfamide combination in patients with anthracycline pretreated advanced breast cancer Kosmas, C Tsavaris, N Malamos, N Stavroyianni, N Gregoriou, A Rokana, S Polyzos, A Br J Cancer Clinical Given the established individual activity of docetaxel and ifosfamide in anthracycline pretreated advanced breast cancer, the present phase I–II study aimed to define the maximum tolerated dose (MTD), the dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs), and activity of the docetaxel–ifosfamide combination in this setting. Cohorts of three to six patients with histologically confirmed metastatic breast cancer after prior anthracycline-based chemotherapy were treated at successive dose levels (DLs) with escalated doses of docetaxel 70–100 mg m(−2) over 1 h on day 1 followed by ifosfamide 5–6 g m(−2) divided over days 1 and 2 (2.5–3.0 g m(−2) day(−1) over 1 h), and recycled every 21 days. G-CSF was added once dose-limiting neutropenia was encountered at a certain DL and planned to be incorporated prophylactically in subsequent higher DLs. In total, 56 patients with a median age of 54.5 (range, 32–72) years and performance status (WHO) of 1 (range, 0–2) were treated at five DLs as follows: 21 in phase I DLs (DL1: 3, DL2: 6, DL3: 3, DL4: 6, and DL5: 3) and the remaining 35 were treated at DL4 (total of 41 patients at DL4), which was defined as the level for phase II testing. All patients were assessable for toxicity and 53 for response. Dose-limiting toxicity (with the addition of G-CSF after DL2) was reached at DL5 with two out of three initial patients developing febrile neutropenia (FN). Clinical response rates, on an intention-to-treat basis, in phase II were: 53.6% (95% CI, 38.3–68.9%); three complete remissions, 19 partial remissions, seven stable disease, and 12 progressive disease. The median response duration was 7 months (3–24 months), median time to progression 6.5 month (0.1–26 month), and median overall survival 13 months (0.1–33 months). Grade 3/4 toxicities included time to progression neutropenia in 78% of patients–with 63% developing grade 4 neutropenia (⩽7 days) and in 12% of these FN, while no grade 3/4 thrombocytopenia was observed. Other toxicities included peripheral neuropathy grade 2 only in 12%, grade 1/2 reversible CNS toxicity in 17%, no renal toxicity, grade 2 myalgias in 10%, grade 3 diarrhoea in 10%, skin/nail toxicity in 17%, and grade 2 fluid retention in 2% of patients. One patient in the study treated at phase II died as a result of acute liver failure after the first cycle. In conclusion, the present phase I–II study determined the feasibility of the docetaxel–ifosfamide combination, defined the MTD and demonstrated the encouraging activity of the regimen in phase II, thus warranting further randomised phase III comparisons to single-agent docetaxel or combinations of the latter with other active agents. Nature Publishing Group 2003-04-22 2003-04-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2747562/ /pubmed/12698179 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6600887 Text en Copyright © 2003 Cancer Research UK https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material.If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Clinical
Kosmas, C
Tsavaris, N
Malamos, N
Stavroyianni, N
Gregoriou, A
Rokana, S
Polyzos, A
Phase I–II study of docetaxel and ifosfamide combination in patients with anthracycline pretreated advanced breast cancer
title Phase I–II study of docetaxel and ifosfamide combination in patients with anthracycline pretreated advanced breast cancer
title_full Phase I–II study of docetaxel and ifosfamide combination in patients with anthracycline pretreated advanced breast cancer
title_fullStr Phase I–II study of docetaxel and ifosfamide combination in patients with anthracycline pretreated advanced breast cancer
title_full_unstemmed Phase I–II study of docetaxel and ifosfamide combination in patients with anthracycline pretreated advanced breast cancer
title_short Phase I–II study of docetaxel and ifosfamide combination in patients with anthracycline pretreated advanced breast cancer
title_sort phase i–ii study of docetaxel and ifosfamide combination in patients with anthracycline pretreated advanced breast cancer
topic Clinical
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2747562/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12698179
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6600887
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