Methotrexate, bleomycin or cisplatin was used to treat 21 patients with advanced bidimensionally measurable epidermoid carcinoma of the penis. Patient characteristics were similar in all 3 drug trials. Drug therapy was continued with each agent until the disease progressed. Significant tumor regression was observed in 8 of 13 men (61 per cent) treated with methotrexate, 3 of 12 (25 per cent) treated with cisplatin and 3 of 14 (21 per cent) treated with bleomycin. Responders tended to be younger than nonresponders (median age 48 versus 59 years, respectively, p less than 0.05) and lived a median of 8 versus 2 months, respectively (p equals 0.03). Cross-resistance was not encountered among the 3 drugs. Future trials might investigate combination regimens of all 3 agents.
Cis-diamminedichloride platinum I1 (DDP) was administered to eight patients with epidermoid carcinoma of the penis. Three of six adequately treated patients had an objective response: one patient achieved complete remission of 7 months duration and 2 patients had partial remissions of 8 and 2 months, respectively. DDP appears to be an active agent in the treatment of penile carcinoma. Cancer 44:1563-1565, 1979.
Sixty-five patients with Stages III and IV diffuse histiocytic lymphoma (DHL) were treated with two different and successive combination chemotherapy protocols. Twenty-seven patients were treated with the cyclophosphamide (CTX) L2 protocol, which included maintenance chemotherapy for three years. Thirty-eight patients received the NHL-3 program. Both protocols included radiotherapy (1350--4000 rad) to areas of initial bulky disease or persistent tumor, as well as central nervous system prophylaxis with intrathecal methotrexate or cytosine arabinoside in patients with bone marrow involvement. Two-year survival rates were 44 and 56%, respectively, for the CTX-L2 and NHL-3 protocols. Of the 65 patients, 59 were evaluable for response to therapy. The CTX-L2 produced a 58% total response (TR) rate, 39% complete (CR), and 19% partial (PR). The patients on NHL-3 achieved a TR rate of 82%, 33% CR, and 48% PR. The difference in TR was significant (P = 0.05), but in CR was not. Prior chemotherapy (P = 0.077) and serum lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) level above 500 U/liter (P = 0.01) significantly lessened the chances for achievement of a CR. However, sex, age, the presence of systemic symptoms, stage (III vs. IV), and prior RT were not found to be significantly related to CR rate. This analysis suggests that a high level of serum LDH characterizes a subgroup of patients with particularly aggressive DHL that requires a more intensive modality of treatment.
Sixty-four women with Stage II breast cancer who had Sr85 bone scans at the time of radical mastectomy were followed for 8 years in a prospective study. Those women with positive scans had a slight, but statistically significant, increased incidence of metastic disease, particularly for metastases to bone.However, 40% of those women with positive bone scans and negative roentgenograms survived 8 years without evidence of any metastatic disease. Therefore, it has not been shown at this time that bone scans should be obtained in order to exclude bone metastasis before regional therapy for breast cancer is instituted. Also, a significant percentage of women with negative bone scans developed both bone and soft tissue metastases. As many as 30% of asymptomatic women with a history of breast cancer and positive bone scans and negative bone roentgenograms may still harbor disease in bone after 8 years.
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