A phase II study of sequential 5-fluorouracil, epirubicin and cyclophosphamide (FEC) and paclitaxel in advanced breast cancer (Protocol PV BC 97/01)

Sequential administration of the association of 5-fluorouracil, epirubicin and cyclophosphamide (FEC) and paclitaxel could be better tolerated than the association of an anthracycline and paclitaxel while having a similar antitumour effect. 69 patients with advanced breast cancer previously untreate...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of cancer 2001-07, Vol.85 (2), p.141-146
Hauptverfasser: Riccardi, A, Pugliese, P, Danova, M, Brugnatelli, S, Grasso, D, Giordano, M, Bernardo, G, Giardina, G, Fava, S, Montanari, G, Pedrotti, C, Trotti, G, Rinaldi, E, Poli, M A, Tinelli, C
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Sequential administration of the association of 5-fluorouracil, epirubicin and cyclophosphamide (FEC) and paclitaxel could be better tolerated than the association of an anthracycline and paclitaxel while having a similar antitumour effect. 69 patients with advanced breast cancer previously untreated with anthracyclines or paclitaxel entered a phase II multicentre study in which FEC was followed by paclitaxel. Both regimens were administered 4 times every 21 days. The median follow-up is 20 months and 38/69 patients have died. Grade III–IV toxicity was acceptable. Leukopenia occurred in 26% of patients, thrombocytopenia in 2% and anaemia in 4%. One patient had reversible heart failure during FEC therapy. Peripheral neuropathy and arthralgia-myalgia occurred in 9% and 4% of patients, respectively and one patient had respiratory hypersensitivity during paclitaxel treatment. 9 patients did not complete therapy because of: treatment refusal ( n = 1), cardiac toxicity ( n = 1), early death during FEC chemotherapy ( n = 1), major protocol violations ( n = 4), hypersensitivity reaction ( n = 1) and early death during paclitaxel chemotherapy ( n = 1). The overall response rate was 65% (95% CI = 53–76), and 7% of patients had stable disease. Therapy was defined as having failed in 28% of patients because they were not evaluable (13%) or had progressive disease (15%). The median time to progression and survival are 13.2 and 23.5 months, respectively. Sequential FEC-paclitaxel is a suitable strategy for patients with metastatic breast cancer who have not been previously treated with anthracyclines and/or taxanes. In fact, it avoids major haematologic toxicity and has a good antitumour effect. © 2001 Cancer Research Campaign www.bjcancer.com
ISSN:0007-0920
1532-1827
DOI:10.1054/bjoc.2001.1897