Cyclophosphamide or ifosfamide in patients with advanced and/or recurrent endometrial carcinoma: a randomized phase II study of the EORTC Gynecological Cancer Cooperative Group
- PMID: 10509788
- DOI: 10.1016/s0301-2115(99)00066-4
Cyclophosphamide or ifosfamide in patients with advanced and/or recurrent endometrial carcinoma: a randomized phase II study of the EORTC Gynecological Cancer Cooperative Group
Abstract
Currently, available chemotherapy regimens for patients with advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer are generally not curative. Thus, there is a need to identify more active single agents in this disease. In this study patients pre-treated and not pre-treated with first line combination chemotherapy were entered into a randomized phase II study of either cyclophosphamide (CYCLO) or Ifosfamide (IFOS).
Patients and method: Sixty one eligible patients with recurrent or metastatic histologically proven, adenocarcinoma of the uterine corpus entered the study. The median age at entry was 62 (range 40-74) years. Twenty patients (33%) had prior hormonal treatment and 31 (51%) prior chemotherapy. CYCLO was given at a dose of 1200 mg/m2 and IFOS at a dose of 5 g/m2. Both drugs were administered i.v. over 24 hours on day one every three weeks. Adequate pre- and post hydration as well as use of Mesna in the Ifosfamide arm were mandatory.
Results: A median of two treatment cycles (range 1-12) per patient were given. In the chemotherapy-naive patients, in the CYCLO arm two PRs (RR 14%, C.I. 2-43%) were seen and in the IFOS arm two CRs, two PRs, (RR 25%, C.I. 7-52%) were observed. No responses were seen in pre-treated patients. The duration of responses were: 15+, 7+ months for the CRs, 15+ and 5 months for PRs in IFOS arm and 67+, 4 months in CYCLO arm. The hematological toxicity was dose-limiting and similar in both treatment arms. No serious non hematological toxicities were reported, but a transient increase of the creatinine blood level was seen in two IFOS patients (6%).
Conclusion: Ifosfamide is an active drug in the treatment of chemotherapy-naive patients with advanced endometrial cancer and its application in currently used (combination) regimens should be considered.
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