The effect of adjuvant combination chemotherapy when given to non-laparotomized patients in remission after radiotherapy in stage I or II non-Hodgkin's lymphoma was studied in a prospective randomized multicenter study. Locally extended field radiotherapy was given to a target absorbed dose of 40 Gy in 20 fractions. Fifty-five patients who were in complete remission 6 weeks after conclusion of radiotherapy were randomized to either no further therapy or to 9 cycles of CVP (cyclophosphamide + vincristine + prednisolone). The relapse-free survival at 30 months was 41% for patients without and 86% for patients with adjuvant chemotherapy (p = 0.02). The survival was the same for both treatment arms, being 90% at 30 months. Fifteen patients have relapsed, 14 of them with extensions and 1 with a recurrence within the radiation target volume. Analysis of subgroups showed that adjuvant chemotherapy in the present series significantly prolonged the relapse-free survival in diffuse histiocytic lymphoma.
Progestins, especially high dose medroxyprogesterone acetate, are receiving renewed attention in treatment of advanced breast cancer. The trials reviewed here indicate that such regimens may be as effective as tamoxifen in postmenopausal unselected cases, and that they may be effective as second-line treatment in patients resistant to tamoxifen and/or to cytotoxic chemotherapy.
Prednimustine is an ester of chlorambucil and prednisolone. The drug has had some activity in experimental as well as in human tumors, including breast cancer. The objective of the current study is to compare the clinical effectiveness and toxicity of prednimustine with its components of chlorambucil plus prednisolone, and to compare the clinical effectiveness and toxicity of a continuous treatment with an intermittent one. Two hundred and one patients with advanced breast cancer were randomized to the following treatments: I: prednimustine continuously; 40 mg/m2 d; II: prednimustine intermittently, 160 mg/m2 d 1 to 5, repeated every three weeks; and III: chlorambucil 8 mg/m2 d plus prednisolone 8 mg/m2 d, both given continuously. All treatments were given orally. One hundred and ninety five patients were evaluable for assessment of response to the treatments. The response rates were 21% in both of the prednimustine‐treated groups, whereas only 11% of the patients treated with chlorambucil and prednisolone responded. The duration of remission with continuous prednimustine was longer than with the other two treatment groups, but not significantly so. One hundred and ninety five patients were evaluable for assessment of hematologic toxicity. No differences were observed between the two prednimustine‐treated groups, whereas the group treated with chlorambucil plus prednisolone experienced a significantly higher degree of leukopenia and/or thrombopenia. Subjective toxicities, nausea, vomiting and psychical symptoms were only moderate in the three treatment groups, but significantly more pronounced in the group treated with intermittent prednimustine. Because of these promising results, prednimustine should be compared to other alkylating agents in patients with advanced breast cancer in randomized trials.
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