Carmichael J, Possinger K, Phillip P, Beykirch M, Kerr H, Walling J, Harris A L
Imperial Cancer Research Fund Clinical Oncology Unit, Churchill Hospital, Oxford, United Kingdom.
J Clin Oncol. 1995 Nov;13(11):2731-6. doi: 10.1200/JCO.1995.13.11.2731.
In this phase II study, the efficacy and tolerability of gemcitabine were studied in 44 patients with locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer.
Of 40 patients assessable for response, 14 were chemotherapy-naive, seven had received adjuvant chemotherapy, and 19 had received one prior chemotherapy regimen for metastatic disease. Gemcitabine was administered as a 30-minute intravenous infusion once a week for 3 weeks followed by a 1-week rest every 4 weeks. The mean number of completed cycles administered was 2.7 and the mean dosage delivered was 725 mg/m2 per injection. Eighty-one percent of doses were delivered as scheduled.
There were three complete responses and seven partial responses, for an overall response rate of 25.0% (95% confidence interval [CI], 12.7% to 41.2%). Four patients were not assessable for efficacy (one had insufficient therapy, two had no bidimensionally measurable disease, and one had neither). All responses were independently validated by an external oncology review board. Responses were observed early in treatment, with a median time to response of 1.9 months. The median survival duration for all 40 assessable patients was 11.5 months. Hematologic toxicity was generally mild, with World Health Organization (WHO) grade 3 and 4 leukopenia occurring in 6.8% and 2.3% of patients and neutropenia in 23.3% and 7.0%, of patients, respectively. The only other grade 4 toxicities were infection and nausea and vomiting in one patient each. One patient was withdrawn due to shortness of breath, possibly drug-related. Flu-like symptoms, which were mild, transient, and treatable with acetominophen, were reported in 6.8% of patients. Only one patient developed alopecia of severity greater than WHO grade 2.
In view of the single-agent activity seen in advanced breast cancer, modest toxicity profile, and novel mechanism of action, gemcitabine deserves evaluation in breast cancer and is an ideal candidate for combination therapy.
在这项II期研究中,对44例局部晚期或转移性乳腺癌患者的吉西他滨疗效和耐受性进行了研究。
在40例可评估疗效的患者中,14例未接受过化疗,7例接受过辅助化疗,19例曾接受过一种针对转移性疾病的化疗方案。吉西他滨通过静脉输注30分钟,每周一次,共3周,随后每4周休息1周。完成的平均周期数为2.7个,每次注射的平均剂量为725mg/m²。81%的剂量按计划给药。
有3例完全缓解和7例部分缓解,总缓解率为25.0%(95%置信区间[CI],12.7%至41.2%)。4例患者无法评估疗效(1例治疗不足,2例无二维可测量疾病,1例两者皆无)。所有缓解均由外部肿瘤学审查委员会独立验证。在治疗早期即观察到缓解,缓解的中位时间为1.9个月。40例可评估患者的中位生存期为11.5个月。血液学毒性一般较轻,世界卫生组织(WHO)3级和4级白细胞减少分别发生在6.8%和2.3%的患者中,中性粒细胞减少分别发生在23.3%和7.0%的患者中。仅有的其他4级毒性是1例患者发生感染,1例患者发生恶心和呕吐。1例患者因呼吸急促(可能与药物有关)退出研究。6.8%的患者报告有轻度、短暂且可用对乙酰氨基酚治疗的流感样症状。只有1例患者出现严重程度大于WHO 2级脱发。
鉴于吉西他滨在晚期乳腺癌中显示出单药活性、适度的毒性特征和新的作用机制,它值得在乳腺癌中进行评估,并且是联合治疗的理想候选药物。