This simultaneous combined-modality regimen was feasible at the cost of severe mucosal toxicity, which required hospitalization with nutritional, parenteral, and hydroelectrolytic support. The high response rate achieved (70%) did not translate into improved survival, probably due to patient eligibility. The likelihood of cure of this high-tumoral-volume patient population remains low (approximately 10%), despite the association of two therapeutic modalities at full standard therapeutic intensity.
The aims of this study were to establish the feasibility and toxicity of the biochemical modulation of the cisplatin (CDDP)-5FU combination by interferon alpha-2b (INF), and to assess its therapeutic efficacy in recurrent and/or metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (SCCHN). The mandatory eligibility criteria included histologically proven SCCHN; a performance status <2; adequate bone marrow, hepatic, renal, and cardiac functions; and measurable and/or evaluable disease. The protocol was CDDP, 100 mg/m2 i.v. day 1; 5-FU, 1,000 mg/m2 in a c.i.v. infusion over 96 h; and INF 3.10(6) U/day s.c., begun 2 h before cisplatinum for 5 consecutive days, repeated every 3 weeks. Twenty patients were included and received 76 cycles (median number cycles/patient = three). Eighteen patients were evaluable for activity with an overall response rate (RR) of 30% [2 complete responses (CR) + 4 partial responses (PR)], which was 55% (5/9) in previously untreated and 9% (1/11) in previously treated patients. Myelosuppression (50%), mucositis (40%), loss of electrolytes (15%), and asthenia (20%) were the most frequent severe toxic effects. Notwithstanding, the protocol was feasible and well tolerated in this overall population with a poor prognosis. Median duration of response was 8 months, and median survival for the overall population was 8.5 months. This schedule is the test arm of an ongoing international multicentric phase III trial versus standard CDDP-5FU in the same SCCHN population.
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