One-hundred-ninety-four eligible and evaluable patients with histologically confirmed locally unresectable adenocarcinoma of the pancreas were randomly assigned to therapy with high-dose (6000 rads) radiation therapy alone, to moderate-dose (4000 rads) radiation + 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), and to high-dose radiation plus 5-FU. Median survival with radiation alone was only 51/2 months from date of diagnosis. Both 5-FU-containing treatment regimens produced a highly significant survival improvement when compared with radiation alone. Forty percent of patients treated with the combined regimens were still living at one year compared with 10% of patients treated with radiation only. Survival differences between 4000 rads plus 5-FU and 6000 rads plus 5-FU were not significant with an overall median survival of ten months. Significant prognostic variables, in addition to treatment, were pretreatment performance status and pretreatment CEA level.
Sixty-two patients with resectable but poor-prognosis gastric carcinoma were randomized to either no surgical adjuvant therapy or treatment with 5-fluorouracil (15 mg/kg by rapid intravenous injection X 3) plus radiation (3,750 rad in 24 fractions) initiated 3 1/2 to six weeks postoperatively. Informed consent was obtained after randomization and only from the 39 randomized to treatment. Ten patients refused their treatment assignment. The five-year survival rate for patients randomized to treatment was 23%, and for those randomized to no treatment, 4% (P less than .05). Both the survival distributions and the alive-without-recurrence distributions were significantly different for the two groups (P = .024) and favored treatment assignment. When the treatment assignment group was broken down to those patients actually receiving treatment and those refusing, five-year survival rates were: treated, 20%; treatment refusal, 30%; controls, 4%; the three survival distributions were not significantly different. Thirty-nine percent of patients actually treated had a local-regional component of first clinical recurrence compared with 54% of those who received no treatment. This study does not establish 5-fluorouracil plus radiation as effective surgical adjuvant therapy for gastric cancer but suggests this approach as a possible fruitful area for continued research. This study also illustrates the potential problems that may be encountered in interpreting results when patients are randomized to a study before consent is obtained.
Fifty-three patients with histologically confirmed osteogenic sarcoma of bone and no clinical evidence of pulmonary metastases were divided into two equivalent groups: one received elective pulmonary irradiation of 1500 rads administered to both lung fields, and the other acted as a control group. There were no significant differences in either survival probabilities or the interval between treatment and the development of pulmonary metastases. Therefore, elective whole lung irradiation so administered was not found to be of value as a prophylactic measure in the treatment of osteogenic sarcoma. There were no recognized untoward reactions to the pulmonary irradiation.
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