Salvage chemotherapy with oxaliplatin and capecitabine for breast cancer patients pretreated with anthracyclines and taxanes.

Journal: Anticancer Research
Published:
Abstract

There is no standard treatment for breast cancer patients whose tumors have been exposed both to anthracyclines and taxanes. Oxaliplatin shows synergism with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and capecitabine is an oral prodrug of 5-FU with known efficacy in pretreated patients. This phase II trial studied the efficacy and toxicity of the oxaliplatin-capecitabine combination as salvage treatment in breast cancer patients pretreated with anthracyclines and taxanes. Patients received oxaliplatin 80 mg/m(2) on day 1 followed by oral capecitabine 1800 mg/m(2) divided in two doses for 7 days every two weeks for a maximum of twelve courses or until disease progression. Twenty-eight patients were evaluable for efficacy and toxicity. Objective responses (all partial) were documented in 9 patients [32%; 95% confidence interval (CI): 13-51.2%]. Responses were documented at all metastatic sites. The median response duration was 5 months (range 3-9), median time to progression was 4.5 months (range 2-10) and median overall survival was 10 months (range 2-18). Myelotoxicity was minimal with grade 3 thrombocytopenia as the main toxicity. Hand-foot syndrome was well tolerated. The present regimen was well tolerated with a rather moderate effectiveness but very significant for this group of patients. Further studies where the combination could be compared with single agent capecitabine are warranted.

Authors
Aristides Polyzos, Helen Gogas, Christos Markopoulos, Nikolas Tsavaris, Othon Papadopoulos, Kostas Polyzos, Athanasios Giannopoulos
Relevant Conditions

Breast Cancer