Résumé
Background: The number of elderly people with soft tissue sarcoma (STS) is increasing. A sizeable population of elderly patients with STS is unfit for conventional doxorubicin- or ifosfamide-based chemotherapy. We assessed the feasibility of metronomic oral cyclophosphamide (CPM) in this population. Patients and methods: Patients aged 65 years or older with unresectable STS received CPM 100 mg twice daily plus prednisolone 20 mg daily, the first week of a 2-week cycle in the outpatient setting. Main evaluation criterion was safety. Secondary evaluation criteria were objective response rate and progression-free survival. Results: Twenty-six patients (median age: 72, range 66-88) received a total of 330 cycles (median per patient: 10, range 2-41) as first (n = 19) or second-line chemotherapy (n = 7). The most frequent histological subtypes were poorly differenciated sarcoma (n = 8), leiomyosarcoma and liposarcoma (n = 5 each) and angiosarcoma (n = 3). Grade ≥3 lymphopenia was observed in 81% of pts but no opportunist infection occurred. Grade 3 anaemia and thrombocytopenia occurred in 2 pts (8%) each. No other grade 3-4 toxicity was seen. The response rate was 26.9% (95%CI: 9.9-44.0) and the disease control rate (responses and stable disease >12 weeks) was 69.2% (95%CI: 51.5-87.0). One complete (hepatic epithelioid haemangio-endothelioma) and 6 partial responses (including 5 pts with radiation-induced sarcomas) were seen. Progression-free survival ranged from 0 to 20.6 months (median: 6.8 months) and was significantly longer in patients with radiation-induced sarcomas (median: 7.8 versus 5.2 months, p = 0.02). Conclusion: Metronomic CPM showed good safety results for this frail population, with promising activity in patients with radiation-induced sarcoma. Toxicity profile was favourable, allowing prolonged home staying and rare treatment discontinuations. A larger prospective study is warranted to confirm these encouraging results in elderly with STS.
langue originale | Anglais |
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Pages (de - à) | 515-519 |
Nombre de pages | 5 |
journal | European Journal of Cancer |
Volume | 47 |
Numéro de publication | 4 |
Les DOIs | |
état | Publié - 1 mars 2011 |