A combination chemoendocrine therapy of mitoxantrone, doxifluridine, and medroxyprogesterone acetate for anthracycline-resistant advanced breast cancer

1997 
Between January 1993 and October 1995, 34 patients with anthracycline-resistant advanced breast cancer were treated with a combination chemoendocrine therapy of mitoxantrone (MIT), doxifluridine (5′-DFUR) and medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA). Of 34 patients, 28 were evaluable for efficacy of this combination therapy, and 30 including 2 for whom data were incomplete were assessed for adverse drug reactions. Adriamycin (ADM) was used for pretreatment in 12 patients, 4′-epi-ADM in 6, and THP-ADM in 12. In the eligible patients, 8.0 mg/m2 MIT was administered intravenously every 4 weeks, and 600 mg MPA and 600 mg 5′-DFUR were given orally every day. The median follow-up period was 25 weeks (range 2–90 weeks). The median cumulative dose of mitoxantrone was 66 mg (range 12–121 mg). Of the 28 patients, 11 (39.3%) responded to this combination therapy. As for response in relation to predominant site of lesion, 1 of 5 soft tissue lesions (20%) and 8 of 12 bone metastases (66.7%) showed a partial response, and one complete response and one partial response (25.0%) were seen in eight lung lesions. None of three pleural lesions responded to this therapy. The median duration of response was 31 ± weeks (range 12–82 weeks). Adverse drug reactions were controllable or tolerable. Combined chemoendocrine therapy with a low dose of MIT is a well-tolerated and moderately effective regimen for the treatment of anthracycline-resistant advanced breast cancer.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    34
    References
    3
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []