In the present study we describe the toxicity of weekly high-dose (70 -85 mg m À2 ) cisplatin in 400 patients (203 men, 197 women; median age 54 years) with advanced solid tumours treated in the period 1990 -2001 who took part in phase I/II trials, investigating the feasibility and efficacy of weekly cisplatin alone, or in combination with paclitaxel or etoposide. Cisplatin was administered in 250 ml NaCl 3% over 3 h, for six intended administrations. The mean number of administrations was 5.3 (range, 1 -6 administrations).Reasons not to complete six cycles were disease progression (7.5%), haematological toxicity (9%), nephrotoxicity (7%), ototoxicity (2.5%), neurotoxicity (1%), gastrointestinal toxicity (1%), cardiovascular complications (0.5%) or a combination of reasons including noncompliance and patient's request (5.5%). Logistic regression analysis was used to evaluate baseline parameters for prognostic value regarding toxicity. Leukopenia correlated with etoposide cotreatment, and thrombocytopenia with cisplatin dose and prior (platinum-based) chemotherapy. Risk factors for nephrotoxicity were older age, female gender, smoking, hypoalbuminaemia and paclitaxel coadministration. Neurotoxicity 4grade 1 (11% of patients) was associated with prior chemotherapy and paclitaxel coadministration. Symptomatic hearing loss occurred in 15% with anaemia as the predisposing factor. We conclude that weekly highdose cisplatin administered in hypertonic saline is a feasible treatment regimen.
Summary Somatostatin analogues can suppress the secretion of some gastrointestinal hormones and growth factors involved in the growth regulation of gastrointestinal cancers and can inhibit the growth of experimental pancreatic tumours. Therefore, in a phase II study 34 patients with metastatic pancreatic (n = 14), colorectal (n = 16) and gastric cancer (n = 4) were treated with three daily subcutaneous injections of 100-200 lAg of the somatostatin analogue Sandostatin . All patients had an extensive tumour load and 13 were pretreated with chemotherapy. Before Sandostatin treatment the patients with pancreatic cancer showed a higher mean plasma concentration of GH (P<0.05) and a lower concentration of 'total' somatomedin-C (P < 0.005) compared with patients with colorectal cancer; there was no significant difference betwen these two groups in plasma levels of directly assayable somatomedin-C, EGF/TGF-a, insulin and prolactin. Within 3 days after start of treatment, somatomedin-C levels initially decreased (without a change in basal plasma GH levels), but returned to pretreatment levels within 4-13 weeks. Plasma insulin levels also were suppressed but only during the first 3-5 days of treatment. Plasma EGF-TGF-a levels increased significantly at day 5 of treatment only in the pancreatic cancer patients. Twenty-seven per ceht of the patients showed stable disease for 3-9 months, but most patients experienced subjective improvement in the absence of serious side-effects. However, the overall survival remained disappointing, emphasising the need for better treatment regimens.
Good-prognosis patients had a performance score of 0 (World Health Organization [WHO]) and an alkaline phosphatase serum level less than 1.25 times the upper limit of normal (N). These patients had a median survival duration greater than 4 years. Intermediate-prognosis patients were characterized by either a WHO performance status < or = 1 or an alkaline phosphatase level > or = 1.25 N. These patients had a median survival duration of 10 months and a 4-year survival rate of only 15%. The poor-prognosis group had both a WHO performance status > or = 1 and an alkaline phosphatase level > or = 1.25 N. These patients had a median survival duration of only 4 months and none survived beyond 14 months. Treatment strategies for these three groups are discussed. It is suggested that this prognostic model be validated in other patients series.
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