Prophylactic administration of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor when monocytopenia appears lessens neutropenia caused by chemotherapy for lung cancer
- PMID: 10857893
- DOI: 10.1097/00000421-200006000-00014
Prophylactic administration of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor when monocytopenia appears lessens neutropenia caused by chemotherapy for lung cancer
Abstract
In a retrospective study, we showed that a monocyte count of <150/microl on days 6 to 8 might be a predictor of grade III or IV neutropenia during cancer chemotherapy given at 3- or 4-week intervals. In the present study, we investigated whether the administration of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) when monocytopenia appears lessens neutropenia during chemotherapy for lung cancer. Between June 1997 and August 1998, 60 patients who received chemotherapy at 3- or 4-week intervals for unresectable lung cancer were randomized to receive G-CSF (2 microg/kg or 50 microg/m2) when monocytopenia (<150/microl) appeared on days 6 to 8 after chemotherapy (group A) or when neutropenia (<1,000/microl) or leukopenia (<2,000/ microl) appeared after chemotherapy (group B). The administration of G-CSF was stopped when the leukocyte or neutrophil counts reached > 10,000/microl or 5,000/microl, respectively. The blood cells counts were examined three times a week and the degree, duration, and frequency of chemotherapy-induced neutropenia of the two groups were compared. One patient in group A was excluded because whole brain irradiation during chemotherapy was required. Twenty-nine and 30 patients in groups A and B, respectively, received platinum-based chemotherapy and their chemotherapy-induced hematologic toxicities were analyzed. The mean neutrophil count nadir of group A (1,558 +/- 1,771/microl) was significantly higher than that of group B (810 +/- 639/microl, p = 0.032). The duration of grade III neutropenia in group A (1.4 +/- 1.7 days) was significantly shorter than that in group B (2.9 +/- 1.9 days, p = 0.004), and the frequency of grade III neutropenia in group A (48%) was significantly lower than that in group B (83%, p = 0.002). Infectious episodes occurred in five and eight patients in groups A and B, respectively. The durations of G-CSF therapy required by group A and B patients (4.8 +/- 3.1 vs. 4.7 +/- 2.7 days) were not significantly different. Prophylactic administration of G-CSF did not exacerbate anemia or thrombocytopenia induced by chemotherapy. We conclude that the prophylactic administration of G-CSF when monocytopenia appears can lessen neutropenia caused by chemotherapy for lung cancer without increasing the total G-CSF dose.
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