One-Day DCF Regimen in Patients with Metastatic Gastric Cancer

Background Cytotoxic chemotherapy is the basic treatment for metastatic gastric cancer. The “docetaxel, cisplatin, 5-day infusion of 5-FU (DCF5)” regimen is regarded as an effective therapy. However, the poor toxicity profile of this regimen and administration by 5-day infusion are major drawbacks o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Tumori 2013-03, Vol.99 (2), p.145-148
Hauptverfasser: Dirican, Ahmet, Kucukzeybek, Yuksel, Tarhan, Mustafa Oktay, Somali, Isil, Erten, Cigdem, Demir, Lutfiye, Can, Alper, Bayoglu, Ibrahim Vedat, Akyol, Murat, Ekinci, Nese, Medeni, Murat, Koyuncu, Betul, Alacacioglu, Ahmet
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Cytotoxic chemotherapy is the basic treatment for metastatic gastric cancer. The “docetaxel, cisplatin, 5-day infusion of 5-FU (DCF5)” regimen is regarded as an effective therapy. However, the poor toxicity profile of this regimen and administration by 5-day infusion are major drawbacks of this method. Methods Patients with measurable metastatic gastric carcinoma, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status ≤2, normal hematological and renal function, adequate hepatic function, and not pretreated for advanced disease with chemotherapy, received docetaxel on day 1, cisplatin on day 1, and 5-FU peripheral IV on day 1 (DCF1) every 3 weeks. The patients undergoing the DCF1 regimen could not receive the infusion regimen. This was a retrospective study about the use of DCF in 1 day in not previously treated metastatic gastric cancer. Results In total, 95 patients were treated with a median of 5 cycles per patient. Those not previously treated for advanced disease received docetaxel 75 mg/m2 on day 1, cisplatin 75 mg/m2 on day 1, and 5-FU peripheral IV 750 mg/m2/day on day 1, plus filgrastim or lenograstim between days 3 and 7. Grade ≥3 toxicities were neutropenia (12%), anemia (11%), thrombocytopenia (3%), fatigue (18%), mucositis (10%), diarrhea (3%), nausea/vomiting (6%), neurological (3%), and palmar-plantar (2%). Two nonfatal febrile neutropenia episodes were recorded. There were no treatment-related deaths. In all patients with measurable disease, we observed an overall response rate of 46% (40 partial responses, 4 complete responses). Thirty-one patients (33%) had stable disease. The median overall survival was 9.0 months (95% CI 7.34–10.6). Conclusions Use of the DCF1 regimen in metastatic gastric cancer is feasible, with comparable activity to previous results achieved with epirubicin-based chemotherapy and infusion DCF in terms of overall survival. However, randomized and prospective studies need to be carried out with this regimen.
ISSN:0300-8916
2038-2529
DOI:10.1177/030089161309900204