ObjectiveIn Western populations, long-term survival rates after curative resection of gastric cancer remain extremely poor. The lack of effective adjuvant therapy has prompted the evaluation of neoadjuvant approaches. Since 1988, we have conducted three separate phase 11 trials using neoadjuvant chemotherapy to treat patients with potentially resectable gastric cancer. The present study was conducted to evaluate whether response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy is predictive of survival in patients with resectable gastric cancer.
MethodsEighty-three patients with pathologically confirmed gastric adenocarcinoma were treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy before planned surgical resection. Response was assessed by upper gastrointestinal series, endoscopy, computed tomography scan, and pathologic examination.
It is feasible to administer prolonged preoperative therapy in patients with potentially resectable gastric carcinoma. Enhanced staging with laparoscopy and EUS helped in proper selection of patients and better characterization of the stage.
Use of preoperative chemotherapy in resectable gastric carcinoma merits further evaluation, but more effective drug regimens will be required before a controlled trial is initiated.
In many patients with liver metastases from islet cell or carcinoid tumor, vascular occlusion therapy results in prolonged control of symptoms, biochemical response, and also tumor regression. Chemotherapy agents were added to evaluate safety and efficacy. Thirty patients with liver metastases from either carcinoid tumor or islet cell carcinoma underwent sequential vascular occlusion therapy combined with chemotherapeutic agents. In patients with carcinoid tumor, a combination of cisplatin (150 mg) and doxorubicin (50 mg) was used. In patients with islet cell carcinoma, a combination of 5-fluorouracil (350 mg) and streptozotocin (1000-2000 mg) was used. Sixteen patients had carcinoid tumor and 14 had islet cell carcinoma. Biochemical response was observed in 12 of 16 (75%) carcinoid patients and 9 of 10 (90%) islet cell patients. The overall partial response rate was 37% (11/30 patients). Partial response occurred in 4 of 16 (25%) patients with carcinoid tumor and 7 of 14 (50%) with islet cell carcinoma. The median duration of partial responses was 24 months (range, 6-63+ months). The median survival of all patients was 15 months (range, 2-67+ months). No treatment-related deaths occurred. Our data suggest that the addition of these chemotherapeutic agents to vascular occlusion, although safe, has no additional benefit.
The DLT of this DX-8951f schedule was granulocytopenia for minimally pretreated patients, and both granulocytopenia and thrombocytopenia for heavily pretreated patients. The MTD for both minimally and heavily pretreated patients was 2.4 mg/m(2). DX-8951f seems to have a linear PK profile on the basis of single-dose administration. The recommended phase II dose with this schedule is 2.4 mg/m(2) for minimally pretreated patients. A lower dose should be used for heavily pretreated patients.
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