Artigo Revisado por pares

Second-Line Treatment of Advanced Gastric Cancer with Oxaliplatin plus Raltitrexed

2003; Karger Publishers; Volume: 26; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1159/000071621

ISSN

2296-5262

Autores

Katharina Schmid, Gabriela Kornek, B. Schüll, Markus Raderer, A. Lenauer, D. Depisch, Friedrich Lang, Werner Scheithauer,

Tópico(s)

Gastric Cancer Management and Outcomes

Resumo

Background: Treatment with oxaliplatin plus raltitrexed has demonstrated an encouraging therapeutic index in patients with advanced colorectal cancer and malignant pleural mesothelioma. The aim of this multi-institutional study was to determine the antitumor potential of this combination in patients with metastatic gastric cancer failing prior palliative first-line chemotherapy, and to reconfirm its favorable toxicity profile. Patients and Methods: 21 patients with metastatic gastric cancer, who progressed while on or within 6 months after discontinuing palliative first-line chemotherapy, participated in this study. They received raltitrexed 3,0 mg/m² and oxaliplatin 130 mg/m² both given intravenously on day 1 every 3 weeks. Results: One patient achieved a partial response, 6 had stable disease, and 14 patients progressed. Median progression-free and overall survival from the onset of salvage chemotherapy was 2.0 and 4.5 months, respectively. Hematologic adverse reactions, specifically neutropenia and anemia were common, though generally mild to moderate with only 3 patients experiencing grade 3/4 toxicity. The most frequent non-hematologic adverse events included nausea/emesis, asthenia, and transient elevation of liver functional parameters, again with grade 3 symptoms occurring only in a minority of patients. Conclusion: Despite reproducibility of a favorable toxicity profile of oxaliplatin + raltitrexed, our data suggest that this combination regimen has no substantial antitumor activity in patients with progressive, chemotherapeutically pretreated metastatic gastric cancer.

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